On November 28, 1996, a woman drove her car into the back of another car in the US state of Idaho. Her one-year-old daughter Alexandra, who was in the front passenger seat beside her, was decapitated. Her head was thrown “through the door window and into the parking lot,” news agency AP reported.
But it was not a high-speed crash. The two cars were inside a mall parking lot. The culprit was the passenger airbag in Alexandra’s mother’s car, which had expanded with its full force at 320 kmph.
By April 1997, airbags that were meant to save lives had killed 63 Americans, of whom 38 were children. The American public was scared. There was a clamour for a switch to disable airbags.
Yet, 25 years later the number of airbags in a car is considered a measure of safety. People want airbags, and transport minister Nitin Gadkari is pushing India’s carmakers to oblige. So, how did the once-feared airbag become a must-have? Let’s rewind 50 years.
Cushion For The Careless
We now see airbags as the primary safety device in a car, but 50 years ago the seat belt got that honour. As Ford’s executive vice-president Fred Secrest told a US Senate Committee hearing on August 1, 1973, belts were more effective than airbags “primarily because belts keep people from being thrown out of the car…. The chances of an occupant being killed in an accident are four times greater if the occupant is ejected from the car.”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 14, 2022-Ausgabe von The Times of India.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 14, 2022-Ausgabe von The Times of India.
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