Safety belts -> Safety belts protect for Your Volkswagen Passat SUV Seventh Generation (2010-2014)

with airbags, all vehicle occupants, including the driver, must wear  
safety belts correctly in order to minimize the risk of severe injury or  
death in a crash, regardless of whether a seating position has an air-  
bag or not.  
An airbag will deploy only once. Safety belts are always there to offer  
protection in those accidents in which airbags are not supposed to  
deploy or when they have already deployed. Unbelted occupants can  
also be thrown out of the vehicle, causing even more severe injuries  
or death.  
It is also important for occupants in the rear seats to wear their safety  
belts properly since they can be thrown violently forward through the  
vehicle in the event of an accident. Unbelted passengers in the rear  
seats endanger not only themselves but also the driver and other  
passengers in the vehicle fig. 63.  
Safety belts protect  
Fig. 64 Belted driver secured by the correctly worn safety belt in the  
event of a sudden braking maneuver.  
¤ Please first read and note the introductory information and  
heed the WARNINGS  
Used properly, safety belts can make a big difference. Safety belts  
help to keep passengers in their seats, gradually reduce energy lev-  
els applied to the body in a collision, and help prevent the uncon-  
trolled movement that can cause serious injuries. In addition, safety  
belts reduce the danger of being thrown out of the vehicle fig. 64.  
Safety belts attach passengers to the car and give them the benefit of  
being slowed down more gently or “softly” through the “give” in the  
safety belts, crumple zones, and other safety features (such as air-  
bags) engineered into today's vehicles. The front crumple zones and  
other passive safety features (such as the airbag system) are also  
designed to absorb kinetic energy. By “absorbing” the kinetic energy  
over a longer period of time, the forces on the body become more  
“tolerable” and less likely to cause injury.  
Although these examples are based on a frontal collision, safety belts  
can also substantially reduce the risk of injury in other kinds of crash-  
es. So, whether you're on a long trip or “just going to the corner  
store,” always buckle up and make sure that others do, too.  
Accident statistics show that vehicle occupants properly wearing safe-  
ty belts have a lower risk of being injured and a much better chance  
of surviving a collision. Properly using safety belts also greatly in-  
creases the ability of the supplemental airbags to do their job in a  
collision. For this reason, wearing a safety belt is required by law in  
most countries including the United States and Canada.  
Although your Volkswagen is equipped with airbags, you still have to  
wear the safety belts provided. Front airbags, for example, are acti-  
vated only in some frontal collisions. The front airbags are not acti-  
vated in all frontal collisions, in side and rear collisions, in rollovers, or  
in cases when the conditions for deployment stored in the electronic  
control unit are not met. The same goes for the other airbag systems  
on your Volkswagen.  
So always wear your safety belt and make sure that everybody in  
your vehicle is properly restrained!  
Using safety belts  
¤ Please first read and note the introductory information and  
heed the WARNINGS  
Checklist  
Using safety belts ꢀ  
d Damage to safety belts reduces their overall effectiveness and in-  
creases the risk of serious personal injury and death whenever the  
vehicle is being used.