2016 FORD POLICE INTERCEPTOR UTILITY airbag

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Page 29 of 350

FORD POLICE INTERCEPTOR UTILITY 2016 1.G Owners Manual PRINCIPLE OF OPERATION
WARNINGS
Always drive and ride with your
seatback upright and the lap belt
snug and low across the hips.
To reduce the risk of injury, make
sure children sit where they can be
p

Page 30 of 350

FORD POLICE INTERCEPTOR UTILITY 2016 1.G Owners Manual The safety belt pretensioners at the front
seating positions are designed to tighten
the safety belts when activated. In frontal
and near-frontal crashes, side crashes and
rollovers, the safety belt p

Page 36 of 350

FORD POLICE INTERCEPTOR UTILITY 2016 1.G Owners Manual The Personal Safety System provides an
improved overall level of frontal crash
protection to front seat occupants and is
designed to help further reduce the risk of
airbag-related injuries. The system

Page 37 of 350

FORD POLICE INTERCEPTOR UTILITY 2016 1.G Owners Manual PRINCIPLE OF OPERATION
WARNINGS
Airbags do not inflate slowly or
gently, and the risk of injury from a
deploying airbag is the greatest close
to the trim covering the airbag module. All occupants of y

Page 38 of 350

FORD POLICE INTERCEPTOR UTILITY 2016 1.G Owners Manual DRIVER AND PASSENGER
AIRBAGS
WARNINGS
Never place your arm or any objects
over an airbag module. Placing your
arm over a deploying airbag can
result in serious arm fractures or other
injuries. Objects

Page 39 of 350

FORD POLICE INTERCEPTOR UTILITY 2016 1.G Owners Manual Children must always be properly
restrained. Accident statistics suggest that
children are safer when properly restrained
in the rear seating positions than in the
front seating position. Failure to f

Page 40 of 350

FORD POLICE INTERCEPTOR UTILITY 2016 1.G Owners Manual •
When the front passenger sensing
system disables (will not inflate) the
front passenger frontal airbag, the
passenger airbag status indicator will
illuminate the OFF lamp and stay lit to
remind yo

Page 41 of 350

FORD POLICE INTERCEPTOR UTILITY 2016 1.G Owners Manual feet comfortably extended on the floor.
Sitting improperly can increase the chance
of injury in a crash event. For example, if
an occupant slouches, lies down, turns
sideways, sits forward, leans forw