
These are some  examples of vehicle  symbols  you  may find on your vehicle: 
POSSlBLE A 
CAUTION 
INJURY 
PROTECT  EYES  BY 
SHIELDING 
CAUSTIC 
BAlTERY 
4CID  COULD  CAUSE 
BURNS 
AVO1 
D 
SPARKS OR 
FLAMES 
SPARK  OR  FLAME 
\\I/' 
COULD 
EXPLODE  BAlTERY  LATCH  BOTH  LAP  AND 
SHOULDER  BELTS 
TO 
PROTECT  OCCUPANT 4 
DO  NOT TWIST SAFETY 
BELT  WHEN  AlTACHING 
FASTEN  SEAT 
BELTS 
MOVE  SEAT  FULLY 
\!$% 
REARWARD* /z 
SECURE 
CHILD  SEAT 
PULL  BELT 
COMPLETELY 
THEN  SECURE  CHILD  SEAT 
TI POWER 
WINDOW  DO  NOT  INSTALL 
A  REAR-FACING 
CHILD  RESTRAINT  IN  THIS  SEATING  POSITION 
DO NOT  INSTALL  A 
'ORWARD-FACING  CHILD  RESTRAINT  IN  THIS  SEATING 
POSITION 
DOOR LOCK 
UNLOCK 
L 
LlGHTlNG - MASTER SWITCH e- / ,  
SIGNALS  TURN 
PARKING 
pf 
LAMPS 
RUNNING  LAMPS 
LAMPS 
so 
ENGINE 
COOLANT  TEMP 
CHARGING  BAlTERY 
SYSTEM 
COOLANT 
d 
ENGINE  OIL  PRESSURE 
Wb 
ANTI-LOCK (@) 
BRAKES  ENGINE 
COOLANT  FAN 
OWNERS  MANUAL 
SERVICE 
MANUAL  

Section 1 Seats  and  Restraint Systems 
Front Seats ...................................................... 1.2 
Manual  Seats 
................................................ 1.2 
Six-Way  Power  Driver  Seat .............................. 1-3 
Power  Lumbar 
............................................... 1-3 
Heated  Seats 
................................................. 1-4 
Head  Restraints 
............................................. 1-6 
Safety  Belts:  They  Are  for  Everyone 
................. 1-7 
Questions  and  Answers  About  Safety  Belts 
...... 1.11 
How  to Wear  Safety  Belts  Properly 
................. 1.12 
Driver  Position 
.............................................. 1.1 2 
Safety  Belt  Use  During Pregnancy 
.................. 1-20 
Reclining 
Seatbacks 
........................................ 1-4 
Safety  Belts ..................................................... 1-7 
Right  Front  Passenger  Position 
....................... 1-20 
Center  Passenger  Position 
............................. 1-21 
Rear  Seat  Passengers .................................. 1-22 
Rear  Safety  Belt Comfort  Guides  for  Children 
and  Small  Adults 
....................................... 1.26 
Safety  Belt  Extender 
..................................... 1-28 
Child  Restraints ............................................. 1.29 
Older  Children 
.............................................. 1-29 
Infants  and  Young  Children 
............................ 1.32 
Child  Restraint  Systems 
................................. 1-35 
Where  to  Put the  Restraint 
............................. 1-38  Top 
Strap 
.................................................... 1.39 
Top  Strap  Anchor  Location 
............................. 1.40 
Lower  Anchorages  and Top  Tethers  for 
Children  (LATCH  System) 
........................... 1.41 
Securing  a Child  Restraint  Designed for the 
LATCH  System 
......................................... 1-43 
Securing  a Child  Restraint  in 
a Rear Outside 
Seat  Position 
............................................ 1.43 
Securing  a  Child  Restraint  in a  Center  Rear 
Seat  Position 
............................................ 1-46 
Securing  a Child  Restraint  in the  Right  Front 
Seat  Position 
............................................ 1.48 
Supplemental Restraint 
System  (SRS) 
............................................. 1-51 
Where  Are  the Air  Bags? 
............................... 1-53 
When  Should  an  Air  Bag  Inflate? 
.................... 1-55 
What  Makes  an Air  Bag  Inflate? 
..................... 1-55 
How  Does  an  Air  Bag  Restrain? 
..................... 1-55 
What  Will You  See  After an  Air  Bag  Inflates? 
....... 1.56 
Servicing  Your Air Bag-Equipped  Vehicle 
......... 1-57 
Checking  Your  Restraint Systems ................... 1.58 
Replacing  Restraint  System Parts 
After  a  Crash 
........................................ 1-58 
Restraint  System  Check .................................. 1-58  

Make sure the release button  on  the buckle  is 
positioned 
so you  would  be  able to unbuckle  the 
safety belt quickly 
if you  ever  had to. 
3. Pick  up the  latch plate  and pull the belt across you. 
Don’t  let it get twisted. 
The  shoulder  belt  may lock 
if you pull the  belt 
across  you  very  quickly. 
If this happens,  let the  belt 
go  back  slightly  to unlock it.  Then pull the  belt 
across  you  more  slowly. 
4. Push the  latch plate into the  buckle until  it clicks. 
Pull  up  on  the latch plate  to make  sure it  is secure. 
If 
the belt  isn’t  long  enough,  see  Safety  Belt Extender 
on page 1-28 at  the end of this section. 
5. To make  the  lap  part tight,  pull  down  on the  buckle 
end 
of the  belt  as you  pull up  on  the shoulder belt. 
1-13  

2. Push the latch plate  into  the buckle until it  clicks. 
Pull  up  on  the latch  plate  to  make sure 
it is 
secure. 
When  the shoulder  belt is  pulled  out all the  way, 
it  will  lock. 
If it does,  let  it go back  all the  way  and 
start  again. 
If the belt  is not  long  enough,  see 
Safety  Belt  Extender  on  page 
1-28. 
Make sure  the  release button  on  the  buckle is 
positioned 
so you would  be able  to unbuckle the 
safety belt quickly  if you  ever  had to. 
3. To make  the  lap part  tight,  pull down  on  the  buckle 
end  of the  belt  as  you pull up  on  the  shoulder  part. 
1-24  

For  example, in a crash  at only 25 mph 
(40  km/h),  a  12-lb. (5.5 kg)  baby  will suddenly 
become 
a 240-lb.  (110  kg) force on a person’s 
arms. 
A baby  should  be secured  in an 
appropriate  restraint. 
- 
Children who are  up against, or very close to, 
any  air  bag  when it inflates  can  be seriously 
injured  or  killed. 
Air bags plus lap-shoulder 
belts  offer outstanding protection  for adults 
and  older  children, but not for young children 
and  infants.  Neither the vehicle’s  safety belt 
system nor  its air  bag system  is designed  for 
them.  Young  children and infants  need the 
protection that  a child  restraint system  can 
provide. 
1-33  

Q: What  are  the  different  types  of  add-on  child restraints? 
A: Add-on  child restraints,  which are purchased  by  the 
vehicle’s owner, are available  in four  basic types. 
Selection  of a particular restraint should take 
into consideration not only  the child’s weight, height, 
and  age but also  whether  or  not the  restraint will 
be  compatible with the  motor vehicle  in which  it will 
be  used. 
For  most  basic types  of child  restraints, there are 
many  different  models available.  When purchasing  a 
child  restraint,  be sure  it is  designed  to  be used 
in  a  motor  vehicle.  If it is,  the  restraint  will  have  a 
label saying that  it meets  federal  motor vehicle 
safety standards. 
The  restraint manufacturer’s instructions that  come 
with  the restraint state the weight  and height 
limitations  for a particular  child restraint. In addition, 
there are  many kinds of restraints available  for 
children  with special needs.  Newborn  infants 
need complete  support, 
including  support  for  the  head  and  neck.  This 
is 
necessary  because  a  newborn  infant’s  neck  is 
weak  and  its head  weighs 
so much  compared 
with  the  rest  of its  body. 
In a  crash, an infant  in  a 
rear-facing  seat  settles  into  the  restraint, 
so the 
crash  forces  can  be distributed  across  the 
~ strongest  part  of  an infant’s  body,  the  back  and 
shoulders.  Infants  always  should  be secured  in 
appropriate  infant  restraints. 
1-34  

A booster  seat (F-G) is a child restraint designed  to 
improve  the  fit 
of the  vehicle’s  safety  belt system. 
Some  booster  seats  have  a shoulder belt positioner, 
and  some  high-back  booster  seats  have  a five-point 
harness. 
A booster  seat  can also  help  a child to  see 
out  the  window. 
Q: How do child restraints  work? 
A: A child restraint system  is any device designed for 
use  in a  motor  vehicle  to restrain, seat,  or position 
children. 
R built-in child restraint system is i! 
permanent part  of the  motor vehicle.  An add-on 
child restraint system  is a portable  one, which 
is purchased  by the vehicle’s owner. 
For many  years,  add-on child  restraints have used 
the adult belt system in the vehicle.  To help 
reduce the chance  of injury,  the child  also  has to  be 
secured within the  restraint. The vehicle’s belt 
system secures the  add-on child  restraint in the 
vehicle, and the add-on child restraint’s harness 
system  holds the child in place within the  restraint. 
One  system,  the three-point harness, has straps that 
come down  over each  of the infant’s shoulders and 
buckle together  at the  crotch.  The five-point harness 
system has  two shoulder  straps, two hip straps  and a 
crotch  strap. 
A shield may take the place  of hip 
straps. 
A T-shaped shield has shoulder straps that 
are  attached  to a flat  pad which rests 
low against the 
child’s  body. 
A shelf- or armrest-type shield has 
straps that  are attached to a  wide, shelf-like shield 
that  swings  up  or to the  side. 
1-37  

When choosing a child restraint,  be  sure  the child 
restraint  is designed  to  be  used  in  a  vehicle. 
If it  is, 
it 
will have  a label  saying  that  it meets  federal  motor 
vehicle  safety  standards. 
Then  follow  the instructions  for the restraint.  You may 
find these  instructions  on the  restraint  itself  or in a 
booklet, or  both. These  restraints  use  the  belt  system  in 
your  vehicle,  but the  child  also  has  to be  secured 
within  the  restraint  to help  reduce  the chance of personal 
injury. When securing  an add-on  child restraint,  refer 
to the  instructions that come  with  the  restraint  which  may 
be  on  the restraint  itself  or  in a  booklet,  or  both, and 
to this  manual.  The child restraint instructions  are 
important, 
so if  they  are  not  available,  obtain  a 
replacement  copy from  the  manufacturer. 
Where to Put the Restraint 
Accident  statistics  show  that  children  are  safer if they 
are  restrained  in  the  rear  rather  than  the  front 
seat.  General  Motors,  therefore,  recommends that  child 
restraints  be secured  in a  rear  seat,  including an 
infant  riding  in a rear-facing  infant  seat,  a  child  riding 
in  a forward-facing child  seat and an  older  child 
riding  in a  booster  seat. 
Never put  a rear-facing 
child  restraint 
in the  front  passenger  seat.  Here’s  why: 
A  cl 
f in a  rear-facing  child  restraint  can  be 
seriously  injured  or  killed  if 
the right  front 
passenger’s  air  bag  inflates.  This  is  because 
the  back  of  the  rear-facing  child  restraint 
would  be  very  close  to  the  inflating  air  bag. 
Always  secure  a  rear-facing  child  restraint  in 
a rear  seat. 
You may  secure  a  forward-facing  child 
restraint  in  the  right  front  seat, but  before  you 
do, always  move  the  front  passenger  seat as 
far  back  as 
it will go. It’s  better  to  secure  the 
child  restraint 
in a  rear  seat. 
Wherever  you install  it, be  sure  to  secure  the  child 
restraint  properly. 
Keep  in mind  that  an unsecured  child  restraint  can  move 
around  in a collision  or  sudden  stop  and  injure  people  in 
the  vehicle.  Be sure to properly  secure  any  child  restraint 
in  your  vehicle 
- even  when  no  child is in  it. 
1-38