Jeep H6 Manual page 218

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23_H6_OM_EN_IN_t.book Page 218
218
SAFETY
Safety experts recommend that children ride
rearward facing in the vehicle as long as possible.
Infants up to 13 kg must be restrained in a
rear-facing seat like the child seat shown in fig. A.
This type of child restraint supports the child's
head and does not induce stress on the neck in the
event of sudden decelerations or a crash.
The rear-facing child restraint is restrained by the
vehicle's seat belts, as shown in fig. A. The child
seat restrains the child with its own harness.
WARNING!
Never place a rear-facing child restraint in
front of an active air bag. A deploying
passenger Front Air Bag can cause death or
serious injury to a child 12 years or younger,
including a child in a rear-facing child
restraint.
Always deactivate the front air bag when using
a rear-facing child restraint in the front seat.
Group 1
Fig. B
Children who weigh between 9 kg and 18 kg may
be carried in a Group 1, forward facing seat like the
one in fig. B. This type of child restraint is for older
children who are too big for a Group 0 or 0+ child
restraint.
Group 2
Fig. C
Children who weigh between 15 kg and 25 kg and
who are too big for the Group 1 child restraint may
use a Group 2 child restraint system.
As shown in fig. C, the Group 2 child restraint
system positions the child correctly with respect to
the seat belt so that the shoulder belt crosses the
child's chest and not the neck, and the lap belt is
snug on the pelvis and not the abdomen.

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