The automaker says customer relations and not safety prompted work on a substitute. The device has been linked to eye injuries.
Nissan Motor Co. has quietly developed a possible replacement for air bags in some of its Altima cars that are linked to severe eye injuries, newly disclosed documents show, even though the automaker has publicly denied there is any safety problem.
A least 40 people have suffered eye injuries or blindness when passenger-side air bags deployed in the Altimas, often in minor crashes, say safety groups and lawyers for people who have sued Torrance-based Nissan North America Inc.
Since March 2001, federal safety regulators have been conducting an investigation, which could lead to the recall of nearly 200,000 cars.
Though Nissan maintains that the air bags are as safe as those in other cars, documents show that the company began developing a possible replacement two years ago — even before federal authorities began their safety investigation.
Read more: http://articles.latimes.com/2002/nov/23/business/fi-airbags23

