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November 5, 2009 3:10 PM PST

Ford makes seatbelt airbag mashup

by Wayne Cunningham
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Inflatable seatbelt

Ford's inflatable seat belts are designed for the rear seat.

(Credit: Ford)

Ford announced a new seat belt innovation on Thursday: seat belts that inflate during a collision. Designed for rear-seat passengers, Ford claims the new seat belts spread collision force over five times the area of a traditional seat belt when inflated. In a crash, the seat belts limit head and neck movement, which should reduce injury.

Ford also says the extra bulk of these seat belts gives them a padded feeling, making them more comfortable, so rear-seat passengers are more likely to wear them. Current usage statistics show that 82 percent of front seat occupants wear seat belts, but only 61 percent of rear seat passengers wear them.

These inflatable seat belts will be included in the next update to the Ford Explorer, with other Ford vehicles following.

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by gadgetgod November 5, 2009 3:44 PM PST
Considering the incidence of so-called Seatbelt Pancreatitis isn't really that high, is there any reason for this? It seems that a 4-point restraint would still be more effective than this.
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by clrgj2 November 5, 2009 5:36 PM PST
YEah hmmm..great idea, too bad Mercedes has already had this since last year.
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by madcow06 November 5, 2009 7:38 PM PST
theres a big difference between the seatbelts being in a experimental mercedes vehicle and being in a production explorer, my guess is if they are in fords production vehicles first then its been in development longer there.
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by jpr November 5, 2009 7:39 PM PST
No, Mercedes does not have this...the only other automaker that has this is Lexus...on the LFA.
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by dswildfire November 6, 2009 8:11 AM PST
if the idea is to distribute forces, and make them more comfortable, why not just make already wider and padded seatbelts without adding the bag and oxidizer components?
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by wjsteele November 9, 2009 9:46 AM PST
We've had seat belt airbags in airplanes for several years now... interesting to see it get "down" into the car market.
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