Child Restraints And Advanced Front Airbag System - Audi TT Coupe 2016 Owner's Manual

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Child
safety
208
as applicable at
the
time your vehicle was
manufactured.
The
Advanced Airbag system
in
your vehicle has
been certified to meet the "low-risk"
require-
ments
for
3- and 6-year old children on the pas-
senger side and small adults on the driver side.
The low risk deployment criteria are intended to
reduce the risk of injury through
interaction
with
the airbag that can occur, for example, by being
too close to the steering wheel and instrument
panel
when the airbag
inflates. In
addition, the
system has been certified to comply with
the
"suppression"
requirements
of
the Safety
Stand-
ard, to
turn
off the front airbag for infants
up
to
12
months
who
are
restrained
on the
front pas-
senger seat
in
child
restraints that are listed in
the Standard.
Even though
your vehicle
is
equipped
with an Ad-
vanced Airbag system, all children, especially
those 12
years and younger, should always ride
in the
back
seat properly restrained for their age
and size.
The
airbag on the passenger side makes
the front seat a potentially dangerous place for a
child to ride. The front seat is not the safest place
for a child in a forward-facing child safety seat.
It
can be a very dangerous place for an infant or a
larger
child in a rearward-facing seat.
The vehicle's Advanced Airbag System has a ca-
pacitive
passenger detection system in
the
front
passenger
seat cushion that can detect
the pres-
ence
of a
baby
or a child in a ch
ild
rest raint
sys-
tem on this
seat.
The
capacitive passenger
detection
system
regis-
ters
the
changes that res ult
in
an e
lectrical
field
when
a ch
ild
, a child
restraint,
and
a baby blanket
are on the front
passenger seat.
The
cha
nge in
the
measured
capacitance due to the
presence of
a child, a
child restraint, and a baby blanket on
the
front
passenger
seat is
related
to the child
restraint
system resting on the seat.
The
meas-
ured capacitance of a child restraint system var-
ies depending on the type of system and specific
make and model.
The
electrical capacitance of the various types,
makes, and models of child restraints specified
by
the U.S.National Highway Traffic Safety Ad-
214
ministration
(NHTSA) in the relevant safety
standard are stored in
the
Advanced Airbag Sys-
tem control
unit together
with
the
capacitances
typical of infants and a 1-year old child. When a
child restraint is used on the front passenger
seat
with a typical 1 year-old infant, the Ad-
vanced Airbag System compares the capacitance
measured by the capacitive passenger detection
system
with
the
data stored in the electronic
con-
trol
unit.
Child restraints and Advanced front airbag
system
Regardless of the
ch
ild
restraint that
you use,
make sure that it has been
certified
to meet Unit-
ed States Federal
Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards
and
has
been
certified by its manufacture
r
for
use
with
a
n
airbag.
Always
be sure that
the child
restraint
is
properly
installed at one of
the
rear
seating
positions.
If in exceptional circumstances
you
must use
it on the front passenger seat,
care-
fully read all
of
the
information on child safety
and
Advanced Airbags and heed all of the appli-
cable
WARNINGS.
Make certain that
the
child
and child restraint are correctly recognized by
the
capacitive passenger detection system in the
front passenger seat, that the front passenger
airbag
is turned off, and that the a irbag status is
always
correctly s ignaled by the
PASSENGER AIR
BAG
OFF
light.
Many types
and models of child
restraints have
been available
over the years,
new models are
in-
troduced
regularly
incorporating new and im-
proved
designs a
nd
older models
are
taken out
of
production.
Child restraints
are
not
standardized.
Child restraints
of the
same type typically
have
diffe
rent
weights and
sizes and different "foot-
prints",
the
size and shape of the bottom of the
chi
ld
restraint that sits on the seat, when they
are
installed on a vehicle seat. These differences
make it virtually impossible to certify compliance
with the requirements for advanced airbags with
each
and every child restraint that has ever been
sold
in the past or will be sold over the course of
t
he useful life of your vehicle.
For
this
reason, the United States National
High-
way
Traffic Safety Administration has published
a
..,_

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