Support for Car Talk is provided by:

Car Talk Columns

November 1997


Dear Tom and Ray:

[yellowcar2.gif]

I keep reading that air bags are dangerous and are responsible for a number of deaths, especially in children and short people. Since, of course, air bags are supposed to be used together with seat belts, I wonder if any or all of the reported air-bag deaths have involved failure to use seat belts. -- Marvin

Ray: Most of them have, Marvin. NHTSA (the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration) keeps tabs on all crash-related fatalities in the United States. And clearly, MOST of the people who have been injured or killed by air bags were not wearing their seat belts.

Tom: Since 1990, there have been 45 children whose deaths were attributed to the deployment of an air bag in a car crash. Of those, only five were properly restrained at the time. And of those five, two were so small that they should have been in child seats (instead of in lap belts and shoulder harnesses).

Ray: For adults, the numbers, while not quite as striking, lead to the same conclusion. There were 37 adults killed by air bags since 1990. Twenty-six of them were either not wearing their seat belts or not wearing them properly.

Tom: But that still leaves 11 people who were properly belted, and yet were killed by a so-called safety device. So clearly, the transition to the "second generation" air bags that inflate with less force, and eventually, the "smart air bags" that sense how much force is needed, should be carried out as quickly as possible.

Ray: In the meantime, it's important to remember that air bags have saved many, many more lives than they have taken. NHTSA estimates that more than 2,500 would have died in crashes, had it not been for their air bags.

Tom: So the best way to decrease your chances of getting killed or injured in a car crash is still to take the following precautions.

Ray: 1) Always wear your seat belt.

Tom: 2) Always put kids in the back seat, which is inherently a safer place than the front seat (and make sure small kids are strapped securely in a child seat).

Ray: 3) And never drive like a knucklehead (i.e. too fast, after drinking, or while eating, talking on the phone, applying makeup or tying your shoelaces).


Changing your oil is the cheapest insurance you can buy for your car, but how often should you change it? Find out by ordering Tom and Ray's pamphlet Ten Ways You May Be Ruining Your Car Without Even Knowing It! To order, send (check or money order) to Ruin, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. You can also order online.


© 1997 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Back to the November 1997 index


[Latest | Previous | Next | Random | Search | Browse | ]

Back to Car Talk Columns

Search Car Talk