Seat belts are the primary means of occupant restraint.
Seat belts help to keep the occupant inside the passenger compartment and
to ride down the crash forces more gradually during the following events:
All seat belts have emergency locks in the retractors. During normal
operation, the retractors remain unlocked in order to allow free movement
of the occupant's upper body under normal driving conditions. The seat belt
webbing is locked into position by a pendulum. This pendulum causes a locking
bar to engage a cog on the spool of the retractor mechanism under the following
conditions:
• | The speed of the vehicle changes abruptly. |
• | The direction of the vehicle changes abruptly. |
• | The vehicle is on a steep upgrade or a downgrade. |
• | The webbing is pulled quickly out of the retractor. |
In conjunction with the seat belts, this vehicle is equipped with a
Supplemental Inflatable Restraint (SIR) System. Refer to
SIR System Operation
in SIR for more information about the SIR (air
bag) System.