GMC 1993 Safari Owner's Manual page 30

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Seats and Safety Belts
AM115008
or the safety belts!
With safety belts, you slow down as the vehicle does.
You get more
time to
stop. You stop over more distance, and your strongest bones take the forces.
That's why safety belts make such
good sense.
Here Are Questions Many People Ask About Safety
Belts-and the Answers
Q:
Won't I be trapped in the vehicle after an accident
if I'm wearing a
safety belt?
A: You could be-whether you're wearing
a safety belt
or not. But you can
easily unbuckle a safety belt, even if you're upside down. And your chance of
being conscious during and after an accident,
so you can unbuckle and get
out, is much greater if you are belted.
Q:
Why don't they just put
in air bags so people won't have to wear
safety belts?
A: "Air bags," or Supplemental Inflatable Restraint systems, are
in some
vehicles today and will be in more
of them in the future. But they are
supplemental systems only-so they work
with safety belts, not instead
of
them. Every "air bag" system ever offered for sale has required the use of
safety belts. Even
if
you're in a vehicle that has "air bags," you still have to
buckle up to get the most protection. That's true not only
in frontal collisions,
but especially in side and other collisions.
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2004 safari

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