12 to 15 inches
it should be 5inches between a driver and steering wheel
There should be a minimum of 10 inches.
Most defensive driving courses advise to at least have 12 to 15 inches of space between the chest and the steering wheel.
Most defensive driving courses advise to at least have 12 to 15 inches of space between the chest and the steering wheel.
12-15 inches
There should be an alignment mark on the steering shaft and the steering wheel.
yes it should be the same thing.
the steering wheel should have ridges on the center chrome peice, turn that peice and the steering wheel should come apart
You should sit comfortably holding the wheel with your arms slightly bent at the elbows. Do not sit close to, or 'crowd,' the steering wheel, or you may suffer injury when the bag deploys.
All drivers need to be properly belted and sit as far from the air bag as possible to allow the air bag to deploy. Short drivers should move the driver's seat rearward to allow space between the driver's chest and the steering wheel, and the seat back should be tilted back slightly. There is no precise distance known that will guarantee that no injuries will occur because all air bags are unique and deploy with different forces. However, the driver should refrain from leaning forward and, to the extent possible, the driver should hold the steering wheel from the side so that his/her arms aren't between the driver and the air bag. The farther away from the air bag the better.
The length of the persons forearm. All drivers need to be properly belted and sit as far from the air bag as possible to allow the air bag to deploy. Short drivers should move the driver's seat rearward to allow space between the driver's chest and the steering wheel, and the seat back should be tilted back slightly. There is no precise distance known that will guarantee that no injuries will occur because all air bags are unique and deploy with different forces. However, the driver should refrain from leaning forward and, to the extent possible, the driver should hold the steering wheel from the side so that his/her arms aren't between the driver and the air bag. The farther away from the air bag the better.
Should be under the dash on the drivers side just left of the steering column.