Table 1 shows two common seats related problems of the 2014 Toyota Corolla.
| Problem Category | Number of Problems |
|---|---|
| Front Seat Head Restraint problems | |
| Seats problems |
Bought the car new in June 2014. After a few months of driving, I have developed bad neck and back pain due to the design of the seat and head restriaint. I like t o sit staight and the head restraint is forcing me to keep my head bent forward, which after a few month, has cause me to head neck and back pain.
Vehicle features "whiplash injury lessening" ("wil") seats. I argue these seats led to dramatically severe injuries. The literature published by Toyota in connection with the alleged safety of the seats implicitly states that benefits inure to those in lower-speed rear-end collisions. No study seems to indicate severity of higher-speed rear-end collisions. Specifically, whether or not wil seats actually benefit low-speed rear-end collision injuries while worsening high-speed rear-end collision injuries. I hypothesize that they worsen high-speed rear-end collision injuries, greatly. I was in a rear-end collision involving a vehicle hitting the Toyota Corolla with wil seats I was driving at or above 75 mph. I suffered 7+ slipped discs along spine, as well as a fractured vertebrae. The vehicle was in motion as it was struck from the rear, and the vehicle I was driving was moving at or about 75mph. The vehicle colliding with my vehicle was driving 75+ mph.