Automatic or passive seat belts, the great compromise between automakers and the United States government. Passive seat belts were one of those “safety” products that cause more harm than good for the end user. It was much hated by consumers and led to them only having a short life from 1990 to 1995. Now why were these seat belts a thing in the first place?
Well the passive seat belts were invented by Volkswagen in 1972 and was first used in the Volkswagen Golf in 1975. This lead the Brock Adam, the United States Secretary of Transportation, to mandated that every car in to have either automatic seat belts or airbags by 1983. Now this angered many lobbyist who thought this was a way too soon of a deadline. In 1981 the mandate was dropped then transferred to the Supreme Court which lead to the mandate to stay, but now with an extended deadline of 1990. Now airbags were still a relatively new system which meant it was pretty expensive. Thus many car companies decided to go with passive seat belts since it was the cheaper option. Now why was this mandated purposed in the first place? Well because people never wear their seat belts, so the government view of this was if people did not wear seat belts on their of accord, then have the car do it for them. Plus in 1978 it was showed that passive seat belts fatality rate was .78 per 100 million miles compared with manual seat belts 2.34 per 100 million miles.
A Demo of the seat belts in action in a 1991Toyota Corolla
source:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seat_belt

There’s a cool novelty for these seat belts. Like you said they are useless since the lap belt exists. Anyways, I liked the blog!
ReplyDeleteThese safety belts were special features on older vehicles and would be a unique element on cars nowadays, but after reading into the imperfections and major hazards along with unforeseeable deceitfulness built into these belts, I think I'll rather have the belt that will save my life than one which will make my car look high-tech! Great post!
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