2003 HONDA PILOT Owners Manual

Page 25 of 392

HONDA PILOT 2003 1.G Owners Manual Children depend on adults to protect
them. However, despite their best
intentions, many parents and other
adults may not know how to
protect young passengers.(See page
.)
So if you have children, or i

Page 26 of 392

HONDA PILOT 2003 1.G Owners Manual According to accident statistics,
children of all ages and sizes are
saf er when they are restrained in the
back seat, not the f ront seat. The
National Highway Traf f ic Saf ety
Administration and Tr

Page 27 of 392

HONDA PILOT 2003 1.G Owners Manual Front airbags have been designed to
help protect adults in a moderate to
severe f rontal collision. To do this,
the passenger’s f ront airbag is quite
large, and it inf lates with tremendous
speed.I

Page 28 of 392

HONDA PILOT 2003 1.G Owners Manual To remind you of the passenger’s
f ront airbag hazards, and that
children must be properly restrained
in a back seat, your vehicle has
warninglabelsonthedashboardand
on the driver’s and f ront pas

Page 29 of 392

HONDA PILOT 2003 1.G Owners Manual Using this f eature will
prevent children f rom opening the
doors and accidentally f alling out
(see page ).
Many parents say they pref er to put
an inf ant or small child in the f ront
passenger seat

Page 30 of 392

HONDA PILOT 2003 1.G Owners Manual Childrenuptoaboutone
year old should be restrained in a
rear-f acing, reclining child seat. Only
a rear-f acing seat provides the
proper support to protect an inf ant’s
head, neck, and back. See pag

Page 31 of 392

HONDA PILOT 2003 1.G Owners Manual A child who is too
large f or a rear-f acing child seat, and
who can sit up without support,
should be restrained in a f orward-
f acing child seat. See page f or
additional inf ormation on protecting

Page 32 of 392

HONDA PILOT 2003 1.G Owners Manual A small child in a f orward-f acing
child seat is also at risk. If the
vehicle seat is too f ar f orward,
or the child’s head is thrown
f orward during a collision, an
inf lating airbag can kill or