Yes, we rebuild all seat belt prentensioners and buckles
- Seat belt locked after an accident/collision
- Seat belt not working properly
- Seat belt is cut, torn, ripped
- Seat belt webbing is cut
- Dog chewed up your seat belt
- Airbag light is on
Start Your Seat Belt Order Today!
Wondering if your seat belt is good or bad?
- First you can try to buckle up and see if it allows you to buckle up and the seat belt light turns off on the dashboard.
- Next step is to pull on the seat belt with a quick jerk and see if the seat belt locks. That is the basic pull test.
- After the vehicle is in accident there is a pyro sensor that is in the seat belt that is initiated to lock the belt. This will store a code and keep your airbag light on. You can also use a diagnostic scan tool to see if there are any seat belt codes stored in the system.
- To test the pyro sensor that is in the seat belt you can use a diagnostic scan tool to see if it has any seat belt codes or use a multimeter to measure OHMs of the seat belt. The OHM reading Good seat belt pretensioner will give you a reading of 2 - 3 OHMs.
If your vehicle was in an accident and your seat belts are locked then the airbag control module is also bad and needs to be reset as well.
Send it to us with your seat belts.
More info on airbag module reset
Learn More About Seat Belt Repair
- The seat belt is too tight or too loose.
- The seat belt won’t retract after releasing.
- The seat belt doesn’t stay taut.
- The seat belt won’t lock or unlock.
- The seat belt stays locked.