Headrest going up....
Are you sure that you're not accidentaly pressing that button? There is no mention of that in the manual and - while the up when going back males sense - the going up when going forward is illogical - ergo not German.
Methinks that you either have a defective switch or you're touching both buttons.
I curious, I am 6'1" and the lowest position is right for me....how many 7'6" people buy these cars in order to justify the ridiculous top position?
I'm 6'4 and keep the headrest as high as possible though, anyway, not necessarily for comfort but because it's the safest place to have it for me, in the case of a hopefully-never-gonna-happen rear ended situation.
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Recently, somebody I know, a woman 68 years old, driving a Lincoln Towncar, hit a patch of black ice at speed on a 2 lane highway. Her car did a 180 on the ice, crossed into the oncoming lane, and plowed, ~rear-first~, into the front of a Toyota Tundra (think Ford F-150). She was killed instantly. (The Tundra driver was OK.)
Now, assuming her seatbelt was on, and air bags worked as designed, considering the dynamics of the crash, I can think of only one thing that would kill somebody in a heavy car crashing like that --- her head and neck may have been ~above~ the lowered headrest. That would snap the neck instantly.
I don't know if that's how it happened -- can't see the medical and police reports. But it sure seems like the kind of thing that those rising head rests are all about.
OTOH, if for some strange engineering reason they move too high, then the head could pop under the head rests --- just as deadly?
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However, M-B does have NECKPRO, where the headrests pop up in the case of a rear accident. So I guess you could be more liberal with how you position it.
However, M-B does have NECKPRO, where the headrests pop up in the case of a rear accident. So I guess you could be more liberal with how you position it.



I do notice in the past, maybe not so much in modern day, that the Benzs and Volvos always had larfer headrestraints which even in the lowest level seem they would be effective for average height. Lincolns and Cadillacs not so much...




But, they do not go back down when you move seat forward, so I have to reach over and press the button to drop them.
BTW, lots of cars have the feature now where headrest goes forward in case of a collision. Think it is called active headrestraints.

Last edited by WEBSRFR; Jan 31, 2012 at 10:49 PM.



