At the risk of sounding cynical and jaded, is anyone remotely surprised by this? The EU has been pushing car encouraging manufacturers to work harder at car safety for longer, and more effectively than the US has.
Seat belts? Volvo. Air bags? First made standard in Mercs and Porsches, at a time when Ford and GM were lobbying against being made to include them. They became optional and then standard between the mid to late 90's, while legislation in the US made them a requirement in 98.
Shaped airbags? Citroen. Side impact airbags? Volvo. Curtain airbags? BMW.
The big difference though is the Euro NCAP ratings. It's near impossible to get a good score on them with just airbags, so the car manufacturers are forced to do more to score well, and it's become a solid marketing tool.
On the other hand, FMVSS 208 (the American testing standard) are designed to require an airbag to be able to stop an adult male not wearing a seatbelt, so fire far too hard, causing a lot of issues. Whilst they'll stop you dying, they'll cause huge trauma and other issues in doing so.
EU car safety technology regulation and manufacturer incentivisation is just a long way ahead, and has been for nearly two decades. So it's not surprising when something like this comes out.
[edit to include important side note]
Never wear anything flammable with sleeves while driving. Airbags are small explosions and can set flammable clothing on fire, causing severe burns &| death. If you need to be warmer, turn on the heater.
Also, never put your thumbs near the centre of the steering wheel. You don't want to be trying to get out of a car after an accident with broken thumbs, which is what you get when the airbag deploys.
It's because the legislation originates from a time when most cars didn't have them as a legal requirement, so the assumption is that someone won't have one or be wearing it, if the car has it. That bit has never been updated.
I'm not sure but I think airbags do detonate on most cars, regardless of the seat belt status. It would be too complicated or unreliable to couple the two systems.
However: an airbag isn't very effective (and could even be dangerous) without the seat belt, so manufacturers in Europe aren't really required to worry about the safety without seat belts. Effectively the safety regulations say: those with no seat belts are idiots breaking the law and it's not your job to worry about the safety those people. Which is completely sensible.
I think optional seat belt laws as found in some parts of the US can make some sense there (owing a lot to the fact that there is no single payer healthcare...) BUT the reasonable thing to do would be to not force car manufacturers to make cars less safe for those who do wear seat belts.
With regards to your first point, they do detonate. It's a question of how.
The main difference is the force with which they go off. In Europe, it's assumed you're wearing a seatbelt, so the force is less, which results in a lower likelihood of injury, compared to a US airbag. Personally, I prefer the European model - wear a seatbelt and you'll be fine, don't and it's on you.
Personally, I prefer the European model - wear a seatbelt and you'll be fine, don't and it's on you.
The other way around is kind of insane - you increase the risk for everybody who is using their safety equipment properly, for the benefit of those who can't be bothered.
> I think optional seat belt laws as found in some parts of the US can make some sense there (owing a lot to the fact that there is no single payer healthcare...)
Wat? So because the taxpayer isn't directly picking up the healthcare bill, it's somehow okay to double serious crash-related injuries and deaths[1]?
It's an age-old debate of "is it ok to (risk) hurting yourself?".
Obviously car crashes and other injuries/deaths come at high cost to society even in the case of privatized health insurances, but the cost is at least indirect rather than direct. It's probably even true that the majority of the cost is indirect, and not related to healthcare.
That said, not having a seat belt/helmet law is... well, stupid.
It's pretty direct unless you have a private ambulance. Otherwise it's tying up a valuable shared resource that could be used to save others whose life is in danger for reasons other than own stupidity.
In the case of seatbelts I think there is more than only thyself. You might be able to control the vehicle better post-crash, preventing injury to bystanders or passengers.
I'm not sure exactly what the grandparent was trying to say, but seat belts became mandatory new car features in the US back in the 1960s. Airbags became mandatory new car features in the early 1990s.
On the other hand, I believe seat belt usage was still under 50% in the early 1990s [1], when the airbag legislation was being written. (I was born in 1970, and the first time I remember wearing a seatbelt was the summer of ... '85? Getting a ride from a high school friend to football practice every day quickly made me a convert. :) )
What I understood was that US regulations for airbags are intended for cars that have airbags only and no seat belts at all. And that those same requirements continue to be applied the airbags + seat belts vehicles we actually encounter.
(cynically, this seems entirely exactly like something Detroit would push for in order to disadvantage imports--so, although this sounds ridiculous, it rings as entirely admissible to me as "no duh" after reading that comment)
Light-duty trucks aren't considered cars in many states and so laws like seat belt requirements and emissions standards don't apply to them. I think it was just this past summer that seat belts became mandatory in trucks in Georgia. It wasn't until 2009 that light-duty trucks needed to be emissions tested and there's still all kinds of exclusions.
When I was a kid, in the 1970s, our car didn't yet have seat belts in the back, but in the front, they were required. I think when they became required in the back, it also became required to use if you had them, which obviously older cars didn't.
But having seat belts for decades and then not expecting people to use them, that's kinda silly.
I think "not expecting people to use them" is in accordance with actual facts, a substantial portion of drivers would flat-out refuse to wear seatbelts. (I feel as if this has changed in recent years, as those people age out, mellow, see reason, or die in car wrecks).
I have two German-made, US-delivery cars with seatbelt switches and pressure mats (occupancy detection) in the passenger seats. I was hoping that this made them smarter than the Toyota and Volvo I own which have no such things wired into their airbag systems, which certainly work as described in this thread.
When buying French-made used cars, one of the important things is to check that the seatbelt switches, pressure mats and their connections are OK. Otherwise, extremely annoying and somewhat costly visits to a car electricity specialist will be needed...
(This is necessary to pass the annual MOT test here, not just a safety concern - if the OBD interface reports any errors, the car is automatically rejected in the test. Other than that, used Citroëns seem to be fine.)
I want to clarify that in 2000 Volvo began selling cars in US with dual stage airbags (S80 at least) and by 2002 (in some cases MY03 cars though) all US Volvos had them for both front airbags.
Dual stage does not mean having the seat weight sensor. That is what is part of what is termed advanced airbag system in US market.
The Volvo system would inflate the airbag less or more rapidly based on force of collision and whether the seat was belted or not. You could have the dealer install a passenger side airbag lock-out though.
I'm guessing here, so pinch of salt required etc...
I think you're probably in something safer there. The idea behind airbag activation sensors is that you don't want to trigger unnecessary deployments (for a few reasons, but that's a bit involved). That said, depending on the system setup and what type of crash you have, alters which car I'd rather be in.
I'm an amateur racer, and I can tell you that seat belts are only a small part of the equation that makes racing crashes survivable. Racing seats are built to fit individual drivers, for instance, and the cocoon -- the portion of the frame where the driver sits -- is designed to protect the seat.
Additionally, race cars are designed to essentially disintegrate in hard wrecks -- the cocoon stays intact, but the rest breaks away as a means of absorbing energy. Road cars have a similar design with crumple zones, but race cars take it many steps further.
It's also come to light in the last ~15 years that belts are simply not enough in some instances. Dale Earnhardt (possibly the most famous racer in history) died in an average-looking wreck at Daytona in 2001 because his neck snapped in a collision with the wall; drivers are now required to wear head and neck restraints to prevent this.
Track design plays a role as well. You've probably seen tire walls and gravel traps, but newer technologies -- like SAFER barriers (energy-absorbing walls made of steel and foam) -- have come along and are replacing the old guard.
There are certainly a lot of other things in racing that contribute to safety. But the biggie is always the harness.
A roll cage won't do jack for you if you're flying around in the cockpit smashing into the roll cage. Crumple zones are also ineffective if you're not strapped in.
Race cars don't have air bags. If you're strapped in tightly, the air bag adds nothing.
I've been in a crash where the belt saved my life, or at least prevented a crippling injury. I walked away with a broken nose. A roll cage or a HANS without belts would not have helped.
One of my cars has three point seat belts in front that do not spool. It is infuriating to unlatch the seat belt every time I have to back-up the car or reach for something on the passenger side. Racing harnesses are even more restrictive when adjusted properly.
The same racing drivers who have to wear top-line racing helmets connected to HANS devices, wear fire-resistant overalls, have medical teams on immediate standby, and who are often strapped in by their mechanics before heading off?
I think you may be overlooking an awful lot of what makes modern motor racing safer than it was in the past.
(and that's ignoring the number of serious injuries and driver deaths that still occur thanks to freak accidents)
I'm looking at the kind of accidents where an airbag is supposed to be effective. An airbag will do nothing for you if the car is burning.
The first and foremost safety device in a race car is the racing belt. The belt means you slow down with the car, which is much less deceleration than if your body hits the dashboard. (The point of crumple zones in the car is to reduced peak deceleration. In order for that to work, you gotta be strapped in.)
An airbag allows the driver's head to experience even lower deceleration than the car, because it gives the head an extra 1-2 feet in which to decelerate--the distance between the upright position and smashed into the deployed airbag.
When wearing a 5-point harness without a helmet and head restraint, the deceleration delta between the car and the head will be entirely borne by the structure of the neck, which is how Dale Earnhardt died.
The fire suit and undergarments are what keeps you alive long enough to be extracted in the event of a fire. They are literally rated in terms of how long they protect you commonly listed as the "Time to 2nd Degree Burn" specification which is arrived at by taking the TPP rating per the SFI spec and halving it.
Before the HANS device was used in NASCAR, I witnessed some serious wrecks during auto-racing that drivers got out of the car under their own power and were fine.
I wonder if the percentage of fatalities from wrecks in auto racing is better or worse that high speed accidents on public highways. It would be an interesting statistic to compare.
Nascar cars use roll cages, so as long as you are strapped into your seat safely you will survive most crashes, if the car doesn't catch fire. Most regular cars don't have roll cages.
> as long as you are strapped into your seat safely
That's the important part. Most of the safety devices in a nascar car (or any racing car really) only make sense if you're tightly strapped in the first place. So the first thing is seatbelt, always. Then you can add more stuff protecting the driver under the assumption that the driver's body will move with the car rather than independently within it.
The seat belts are the most effective. Helmets and HANS add to that, but the belts are the #1 safety device.
Another anecdote is in order. My father was a fighter jet instructor. The usual arrangement is tandem seating. He related an incident where the jet went off the runway, the nose gear sunk into the mud and the jet went up on its nose.
The guy in back had taken off his shoulder harness while taxiing, but left the helmet and lap belt on. He hit the dash so hard it left his brains splattered all over it, despite having a helmet.
The guy in front left his shoulder harness on, and was uninjured.
My father said that after seeing that, he never unbuckled the harness until the airplane was parked and the engines shut down. He also never moved his car an inch unless everyone in it was buckled up, and this was in the early 1960's long before it was fashionable. I picked up the habit from him :-)
I too think that being buckled-in is the most important, but a 4 or 5 point harness will just not work in a street car. Maybe my best advice is for you to read the relevant sections in the SCCA handbook. Forget about the cage, assume just a cross bar and harness. You will see that it makes it impossible to have the harness at a safe orientation for the driver yet allow a rear passenger. Also when you add the cross bar as it also required, it is now unsafe for a rear passenger.
Further any car with a cage has other compromises and some of those reasons for a cage are for things like being able to quickly jack the car up and rigidity (not just safety) but limits how people can enter and exit for example.
A harness is just not a good fit for a street car. The three point seat belt is an excellent compromise.
iirc, Volvo did a lot of testing to find the optimum setup in an ordinary passenger car. The 3-point belts worked best, as they were the easiest to get out of after an accident. Remember that race cars typically have people waiting in the event of an accident to assist in removing the person from the car. In a more typical accident, it can be much longer before help arrives. As a result, seat belt setups must be easy for the user to get out of by themselves. While 5-point systems fared better in the actual accidents, 3-point systems more than compensated by allowing individuals to free themselves from the car and preventing further injuries.
The 5 point racing harnesses have a very easy to use quick release on it, as it releases all the straps at once. You don't have to unthread your arm from it, like you do with a typical car 3 point system, and the release on typical auto belts is inferior. The webbing is narrower and thinner, too.
When I crew it takes a few minutes to adjust the seat and harness anytime we have a driver change. The genius of the modern three point seat belt is how easy it is to put on (comparable to lap belt, yet much more effective), how comfortable it is to wear (with the advent of the spool and height adjustment), and effective (due to seatbelt pretensioners).
5 point harnesses are completely impractical with many types and styles of clothing.
I don't know if you can legally install one to replace your 3 point by choice, but if you mandated them I suspect seat belt usage would plummet, which seems counterproductive.
For that matter, mandated helmet usage would improve many types of injuries, but I don't see that flying either.
From a public safety point of view, many of these decisions are more about balancing compliance and safety, rather than safety alone.
I've often wondered how many lives would be saved if people wore helmets during daily driving. I'd bet a lot. Of course, good luck getting people to do it.
I would not be surprised if helmet usage increased serious accidents/injuries and fatalities. The peripheral vision (for crossing roads, rotaries, and spotting pedestrians) is vastly worse wearing a helmet, at least the SA full-face helmets I've worn in amateur motorsports.
Race tracks don't have most of those hazards, and control most of the pedestrian hazards, with the limited pedestrians on the hot side of the pit wall assuming much of the responsibility for their own safety.
This would be offset by a reduction in head injuries (with a possible increase in neck and spinal injuries). I think I'd bet a full study would show an overall decrease in safety.
"vastly worse wearing a helmet, at least the SA full-face helmets"
Which is why the research into this topic focuses more on headbands, which mostly protect the forehead, than the entire head. See http://www.copenhagenize.com/2009/10/australian-helmet-scien... for a summary of Australian research and a sketch of the head gear. They quote:
> But more impressive were the estimates of introducing protective headwear for car occupants. The authors of the report estimated that the annual reduction in harm would be in the order of $380 million. The benefit of padding the head is that the head is protected from strikes with unpadded automotive components, exterior objects and in vehicles that predate any eventual introduction of padded interiors."
I actually wonder if there is a limit on the size of the A pillar in cars. The car I drive right now seems like it has a larger A pillar than the (super old) car I had before, presumably for safety. But it's almost caused me to get into several accidents as I am almost completely blind when slighting left. Just the other day I nearly hit a pedestrian who was crossing against the light. I slowed down for the turn but had the green light, and the pedestrian was crossing the street at just the right speed to stay in the blind spot of my driver's side A pillar. If I hadn't moved my head to double check, I would have run them over. I've never had this issue on any other car, but it's a big problem for me right now.
So imagine that blocking a good section of your forward vision, and a helmet blocking anything to the sides... motorcycles have very small blind spots as the rider can swivel anywhere with no cage blocking them. Helmets are a minor contributor. But cars don't have that luxury.
I don't think the EU pushed Volvo though; for the longest time, their slogan was "Drive Safely" and they've always been emphasising safety over other features.
TL;DR: no-one should die or be seriously injured in a crash in a new Volvo by 2020 (two vehicle generations away from now).
Mostly that's based on Gilb's first two Laws of Unreliability (computers are unreliable, but humans are far more so, and systems which depend on human reliability are by definition unreliable).
In Top Gear's tribute to Saab, Clarkson said that a senior designer friend at "another Sweedish car company" told him that no one could figure out why Saabs cost as much as they did, until they crash tested them.
> Also, never put your thumbs near the centre of the steering wheel.
The normal way of holding a steering wheel (thumb and forefinger forming an "O" around the wheel) may increase risk of minor wrist and hand injuries during small accidents. This probably isn't important for the general population, but for people who make a living with their hands it's worth mentioning.
> Less commonly, forced dorsiflexion
against a steering wheel in a motor vehicle accident or
a ball forcing the palm dorsally can cause a scaphoid fracture
There's more to it than the airbag. In an accident the steering wheel can carry a lot of force. Frangible and later collapsible steering columns (and now common power steering) have alleviated by a lot but it is still quite a lot of force. You don't want just pushing or pulling vigorously on on the wheel or a huge pothole to affect it. In the time before airbags when these things were created it was more to prevent breaking too many ribs while impaling the driver.
So anyway, problem to this day is that the wheel can wretch around by many degrees very rapidly in an accident. This can break a thumb or what not. So don't wrap your thumb around the wheel but have them more in a Fonzie thumbs-up jut off to the outside.
In the time before airbags it was also recommended to take your hands off the wheel and have your forearms over your chest and chest and hands over face the moment you no longer had control and could not regain it before the impact. This protected your ribs and face. The advice now is to bring your hands up to your armpits without any crossing or covering in an airbag equipped car.
Well, the US car manufacturers must have been surprised. They commissioned the study, and must have thought they could spin the results to prove that the difference is negligible.
My guess is the real difference is even bigger than this report shows.
To elaborate on NCAP: to reach the highest level of safetly in Europe, there are certain accident scenarios involving pedestrians where the safety of the pedestrian factors in (i.e. not only the passengers' ).
Rather than write many replies to those in this thread (often rehashing the same thing) I am going to reply here and address it all. There are many people claiming outdated info as current fact and misinterpreting what the differences actually imply in US v. EU occupant crash protection.
Regarding the airbags. The US now requires advanced frontal airbags in all passenger cars and light trucks. It started phasing them in back in 2003. Moreover prior in 1997 the NHTSA permitted depowered airbags which rapidly became the norm. Here is a nice FAQ with more details:
Now for the gist and background: In the '70s GM pioneered research into airbags (as an aside the interior of the contemporary Volvo SCC which became the 240 simply looked like a bumper car instead https://scontent.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xtf1/v/t1.0-9/12042626... ). In the world as a whole (not just US) seat belt use was dismal. So initially it was hoped that they could be used without seat belts. Since the original systems were so cumbersome (for example one of them used a bottle of compressed gas) and complicated (the original acceptable switches were wighted metal balls with rings of conductors and springs) it took quite a while for them to get developed to the point that they were acceptably reliable, safe, and priced. To give an example, one consideration not immediately obvious is how the head rebounds off the airbag and into what with how much force. It took quite a lot of development that is not appreciated my most people these days, very worthwhile effort which has saved and improved the quality of life for many.
Yet by that point in time seat belt use was still abysmal in US. In some parts of Western Europe it was improving more rapidly. So policy was in US for the airbags to deploy faster and bigger (which might not be expected, but the reason is that the occupant might be not where you expect, for example sliding down into the footwell or about to be ejected from a window). The interesting aspect to this is that there is data that the US style was even better for belted adult occupants (of not small stature - more on that in a bit) in more severe accidents. This is because until the more recent advent of seat belt pretensioners and later knee bolsters it was common for occupants to slide under the steering wheel while braking or have their chest pulled in to closer than 10" from the air bag cover from same braking.
One other thing to keep in mind is that air bags were seen as a supplemental restraint system due to the lack of seat belt use in US and the requirements were initially for there to be such an SRS in place (not necessarily airbags) for certain fleet percentages by certain dates. One unexpected result was that airbag fleet saturation was lower than predicted initially due to a fluke of history. Airbags by that point used explosive charges and there were a number of snafus in their manufacture initially related to that. Ford in particular was very hard hit but a number of European makes faced shortages as well. That shortage and changing US regulation were two more reason why Peugeot pulled-out of US market since they could not surmount in a profitable manner for example. This led to the proliferation of systems that would have the shoulder belt in place at all times. Chrysler in particular benefited greatly from dumb luck in that the suppliers it had picked did not have any factories blow-up essentially and even had marketing in place at the time touting how their cars had airbags while their competitors did not.
Now back to short occupants: It was realized that the airbags were injuring or killing occupants in some cases early on. Again at that time seat belt use was still poor in US. So aftermarket airbag cut-off switches were permitted. There was also a process for having them certified for use. It was not uncommon for people that needed them (smaller drivers, those that needed to transport a child in the front, elderly, and so on) to have them installed at a dealer and shortly after that they became common place in US cars which were most likely to need them (such as pickups) as standard equipment.
With time seat belt use became much more prevalent in US. At that point depowered airbags were allowed and they rapidly became common place (due to the attention created from the deaths and injuries caused my the prior systems - of which there were few around 200 at that time, vastly out numbered by those benefited) and practically no cost difference. That brought US and EU airbags more in line, but there was still a critical difference. The US airbags were often larger. It was not all about preventing the ejection of an unbelted occupant though. Another consideration was the front middle seat occupant (most often a child with only a lap belt at best) which was still common due to non-extended cab pickups and family/luxury cars with a front bench seat.
Which now brings me to advanced frontal airbags which are now required in US in entire passenger and light truck fleet for just over nine years. Essentially the minimum is that the system calculates occupant weight to determine if the airbag will be prevented from deploying. There is moreover a requirement that the SRS warning label state that an advanced airbag system is in place (with specific clear wording) and also an indicator light (also specifically clearly labeled) indication when the passenger front airbag is disabled. It is very common for the advanced frontal airbag system to also take into account factors such as collision forces and whether the occupant is belted or not in deciding whether to deploy the airbag or not. There are now also systems in place that in addition to all of that also take into account individual seat and spool positions. More over dual igniter systems are becoming more common place, so that front airbag can be inflated more rapidly (though more forcefully) only if needed. In addition multi-stage and variable output air bag systems are permitted in US as well, though they are rarer and typically in more costly cars.
So it really is becoming that US regulations are coming more in line to that of EU and with time and further tweaking of the regs it will become a moot difference - the airbags will be very smart and only deploy most forcefully only when safe and most necessary. Along the way there were many benefits. The US regs are not stagnant nor created in a vacuum as some seem to think. There was history, market forces, and data to what took place and when. Here is one further benefit to the US system that not many people expect: Over time the rules were in fact different across Europe regarding air bags. For example Spain's requirements were slightly different from France's at different times and what happens when you bring that car into Poland and sell it? What about if you bring an older Polish car and sell it in Spain or France, oh boy! There are a number of differences that fall under the US advanced airbag umbrella all handled differently in those three countries at different times, for example in what is permitted regarding the switch based on weight vs. a physical switch and if the seat belt is latched or not to how this is all indicated and labeled. It's a real mess. In US, you just flip the sun visor down and read what you have. Even the procedure for after market alteration specifies that that warning label must be amended appropriately - and how that is to be worded is very specifically laid-out. It's quite impressive to me actually how well this all was thought-out.
Now as to the article. It's not a very good article really. Here's the paper itself (pdf):
I've read through parts and I'll not touch the issue of how it relates to TTIP, but really it shows both in some ways how some EU regs are seeming better and how some US regs as well are seemingly better when you examine crashes statistically. Of course there is not nearly as much raw data for example in the headlight example (you can read the paper itself for details, essentially they had to cull the data down to one hour in one month per each territory and that effects confidence in the result). But to my eyes it really is not all that damning for the US airbag system. The worst results are for high speed driver side front/side airbag deployments (which are difficult to begin with) but when I read through I am not convinced it is factoring all differences from region to region sufficiently to have such a strong claim. For example it's only more recently that advanced airbags were introduced and the early systems were cruder than the current commonly used systems. Cars tend to stay on the road longer in US than EU (particularly in the regions without inspections where my further points will hold as well) so there were many cars with cruder SRS in place. There are many rural areas in those places the roads are not illuminated, there is oncoming and side traffic, wild-life, and people travel are high speed. Further there are more higher GVW cars on the roads in US which could affect the side impact statistics largely to the extent highlighted in my opinion. Notice how well the US does in rollover, that's largely because the market here is different and so it was addressed because there were more cars more prone to roll overs and more people were suffering. So I read over the paper and I personally do not yet believe it controlled for the differences in territories sufficiently.
That said, it's an excellent paper with some surprising results. What I take away from it is really it is a further impetus to move the advanced airbag systems in place in US farther to the higher tech and at least dual-mode operation across the entire fleet. You will never be able to fully address the belted vs. unbelted completely in US simply for practical reasons like people using light trucks in a manner where they back or egress the vehicle often so it's good to still account for it intelligently. Also it would seem wise for the EU to investigate US illumination requirements as they pertain to pedestrian safety cause the results were tantalizing there (though possibly not controlled well enough as well as lacking sufficient data) in the same way that I would hope that US is investigating autodipping intelligent headlights now.
Seat belts? Volvo. Air bags? First made standard in Mercs and Porsches, at a time when Ford and GM were lobbying against being made to include them. They became optional and then standard between the mid to late 90's, while legislation in the US made them a requirement in 98.
Shaped airbags? Citroen. Side impact airbags? Volvo. Curtain airbags? BMW.
The big difference though is the Euro NCAP ratings. It's near impossible to get a good score on them with just airbags, so the car manufacturers are forced to do more to score well, and it's become a solid marketing tool.
On the other hand, FMVSS 208 (the American testing standard) are designed to require an airbag to be able to stop an adult male not wearing a seatbelt, so fire far too hard, causing a lot of issues. Whilst they'll stop you dying, they'll cause huge trauma and other issues in doing so.
EU car safety technology regulation and manufacturer incentivisation is just a long way ahead, and has been for nearly two decades. So it's not surprising when something like this comes out.
[edit to include important side note]
Never wear anything flammable with sleeves while driving. Airbags are small explosions and can set flammable clothing on fire, causing severe burns &| death. If you need to be warmer, turn on the heater.
Also, never put your thumbs near the centre of the steering wheel. You don't want to be trying to get out of a car after an accident with broken thumbs, which is what you get when the airbag deploys.