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Defensive Driving
Take this course if you received a ticket in Arkansas or were court ordered to take
a driving course.
First Time Driver Course
The First Time Driver Drug and Alcohol Course teaches new drivers basic traffic laws and is proven to reduce the risk of alcohol related crashes amongst teenagers and young adults.
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Airbags
Airbags are inflated by burning sodium azide, the stuff used in detonators and other applications the ATF would just as soon you not know about, and potassium nitrate, which is commonly called saltpeter and a key component in "blackpowder" gunpowder. But don't be afraid, the result of this reaction is non-toxic nitrogen gas. The "smoke" reported by accident victims is largely the corn starch or talcum powder used to lubricate the folded nylon bag and facilitate its opening.
Many airbags use crash sensors based on high-powered magnets. These magnets are forced apart if the crash is big enough (definition of a "small crash": one you're not in.) and in a direction the airbags can help. For front airbags, the threshold is equal to hitting a solid wall head-on about 12 to 15 mph. When the magnets are flung apart, a signal is sent to a computer. After its digital brain confirms that, yes, indeed this is a crash and not a spurious signal, it sends an electrical charge into the solid propellant. From the instant the magnets move to the moment when the airbag is fully deployed is about 30 milliseconds.
The inflated airbag prevents occupants from slamming into the interior of the car. In a severe crash without an airbag, the driver's head might hit the steering wheel even if he's wearing a seatbelt. Airbags also avert a forward neck-snap that might produce a basal skull fracture of the type that killed Dale Earnhardt.
