Hi Laurie,
I'm a little confused now about the comment regarding interference with the curtain airbags from side rails.
I can see issues with airbags from "tree rails" that traditionally attach at the bullbar and then run down to become sliders under the sill, protecting the fenders. That sort of continuous run is going to mess with the inertia sensors big time as they would disperse the shock loads in all sorts of ways the vehicle designers never intended. I don't see the same issue with separate "sliders" along just the sill though. Any side impact large enough to trip the side sensors is still going to be effective with some sort of slider as it is attached to the sill (or chassis rail under the sill). Crush rates and crumple could be affected sure but the airbags would still fire as expected. Maybe I'm missing something.
Land Rover make a set of fairly substantial side rails for the L322. They call these "Side Protection Tubes", Part# VUB001230. These are significantly more robust than the aluminium side steps for the vehicle, although they aren't "steps". I have seen them close up fitted to a vehicle and they looked at least as beefy as a set of sliders I had on my D2 a while back.
If LR can market these for fitment to the vehicle how do they get around the airbag issue? Just wondering.
Cheers,
Iain


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