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Where Are They

Air bags ( are soupose to ) deploy, from inirtia. New Fords have a central location ( under the center console ) for the front sensors. Though I am not positive about the side sensors every other car I have encountered has the side sensors under the seats or in the B pilar.

For the front is has to be a sudden and forceful impact, glancing blows should not deploy the bag.

I will post a picture of the mechnism that deploys air bags in most of todays vehicles.
 



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Here is an air bag sesnor used in GM, Honda, Toyota and several others.
It lays flat and the spring faces the front of the vehicle.
The spring is very exacting.
At the point of an impact that metal sleeve slides forward and makes contact with two wires. *BOOM* in 1/100th of a second the bags inflate and deinflate.
 

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Thats a great post monmix That helps me out alot. Thanks a billion
 






Thats all?! :eek: :eek: :eek: No wonder I have heard of them going off while wheeling hard. Any way to disable them for rough terrain? I would hate to blow 4 air bags and destroy my whole interior. :mad:
 






well odds are very, very slim you will ever deploy all four.
Fronts, or sides but all four are never soupose to go off simultaniously.
Unless there is some freakishly bizare timing in a four car accident :p

As far as diabeling is concerned the closest you will be able to get to that is to pull a fuse, but that is not 100%.
 






I wheel the **** out of my truck and haven't deployed an airbag yet. Chances are you won't but like Kevin said, you can pull the fuse.
 






I have an '02 E.B. that i just bought from Car dealership...The guy told me that it has the side airbags, but how do I know. What can i check or do to determine if I have them or not.
 






My '01 XLT says "air bag" on the sides of the front seats. My bosses 01 lincoln says the same thing. We know his is there, one exploded going down the highway one day. BANG!

ford fixed it, but still....
 






I have an '02 E.B. that i just bought from Car dealership...The guy told me that it has the side airbags, but how do I know. What can i check or do to determine if I have them or not.




not on any 02 explorer?
 






Our 2002 Limited has the side curtain airbags. Mabey some models had them and some didnt.
 






I wrecked a '97 Monte Carlo... slid off the side of the road, cleaned the ditch for about 20 feet and hit a log head on... then proceeded to flip to the roof and skid for another 20 feet.

Airbags didn't deploy.
 






...My father-in-law's `02 Mountaineer V6 AWD has Side Curtain Air Bags, and on the side trim, it says 'Airbag'.

Ryan
 






think it depends as to when it ws built. as my 2002 was built in 2001.
 






I was hit in the passenger rear tire and my air bags went off in my 97. I was hit so hard though my tire, rotor, caliper, dust shield all went flying all over. Rotor landed in the back of the truck that hit me, spare tire snapped off from underneath the car and rolled down the street....
 






one more thing though... no air bag will ever deploy unless you are sitting in the seat and have the seat belt on...

other than that I see no reason why would the airbag go off if the truck was hit from the side...
Usually as it is explained in the Owners manual - air bag would deploy if you are in the frontal collision and the truck is hit anywhere within 30 degrees off the center of the truck.

Here's what I copied from Wikipedia:
"Triggering conditions

Air bags are typically designed to deploy in frontal and near-frontal collisions, which are comparable to hitting a solid barrier at approximately 8 to 14 miles per hour (mph) (13 to 23 km/h). Roughly speaking, a 14 mph (23 km/h) barrier collision is equivalent to striking a parked car of similar size across the full front of each vehicle at about 28 mph (45 km/h). This is because the parked car absorbs some of the energy of the crash, and is pushed by the striking vehicle. Unlike crash tests into barriers, real-world crashes typically occur at angles, and the crash forces usually are not evenly distributed across the front of the vehicle. Consequently, the relative speed between a striking and struck vehicle required to deploy the air bag in a real-world crash can be much higher than an equivalent barrier crash.

Because air bag sensors measure deceleration, vehicle speed and damage are not good indicators of whether an air bag should have deployed. Occasionally, air bags can deploy due to the vehicle's undercarriage violently striking a low object protruding above the roadway surface. Despite the lack of visible front-end damage, high deceleration forces may occur in this type of crash, resulting in the deployment of the air bag.

The airbag sensor is a MEMS accelerometer, which is a small integrated circuit chip with integrated micromechanical elements. The microscopic mechanical element moves in response to rapid deceleration, and this motion causes a change in capacitance, which is detected by the electronics on the chip, which then sends a signal to fire the airbag. The most common MEMS accelerometer in use is the ADXL-50 by Analog Devices, but there are other MEMS manufacturers as well.

There was some work initially in mercury switches but they did not work very well. Before MEMS, the primary system used to deploy airbags was called a "rolamite". A rolamite is a mechanical device, consisting of a roller suspended within a tensioned band. As a result of the particular geometry and material properties used, the roller is free to translate with very little friction or hysteresis. This device was developed at Sandia National Laboratories. The rolamite and similar macro-mechanical devices were used in air bags until the mid-1990s when they were universally replaced with MEMS.

Most air bags are designed to automatically deploy in the event of a vehicle fire when temperatures reach 300 to 400 degrees Fahrenheit (150 to 200 °C). This safety feature helps to ensure that such temperatures do not cause an explosion of the inflator unit within the air bag module.

Today, airbag triggering algorithms are becoming much more complex. They try to reduce useless deployments (for example, at low speed, no shocks should trigger the airbag to help reduce damage to the car interior in conditions where the seat belt would be an adequate safety device) and to adapt the deployment speed to the crash conditions. The algorithms are considered as very valuable intellectual property. Experimental algorithms may take into account such factors as the weight of the occupant, the seat location, seatbelt use, and even attempt to determine if a baby seat is present."
 






one more thing though... no air bag will ever deploy unless you are sitting in the seat and have the seat belt on...

]
Not true on older vehicles.
 






Air bags going off in a side or rear impact accident are just going to be one more "hit" on the passenger/occupant.
Air bags protect you in a Frontal Crash. They keep you from going through the w/s or hitting the dash or headliner. No reason to deploy otherwise.
I would say your friends are better off that the air bags didnt go off. I say this after seeing my wife after our air bags went off in a frontal accident. She was bruised but not broken. So I guess they did their job.
 






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