Moderator: The Mod Squad
Alex B wrote:To be fair you're never going to fit into OS unless you hate on TS.
Mr Revhead wrote:Maybe they are designed to work length ways. As in the are strongest that way. Crossing them over adds side loading to them in a crash and may weaken them.
That is what I thought of when I heard of the no crossing rule from MSNZ
siren676 wrote:@ae86less
I have had it to 160kph down both straights at Pukekohe so I think they might have a little bit of strain on them.
They are clipped to eye bolts which replaced the factory seatbelt bolts.
Alex B wrote:To be fair you're never going to fit into OS unless you hate on TS.
(a) Shoulder straps shall be of equal length and when worn should make an angle
between +10° and -10° to the horizontal, although u p to a maximum of -45° is
accepted (refer Diagram 4.3.3). The straps should rest on the wearers’ shoulders
and not on the top of the seat or the harness holes in the seat. Excessively long
shoulder straps should be avoided.
Mr Revhead wrote:Wait, a race series that lets you race in a field of cars with no cages etc!? Wtf!
Mr Revhead wrote:Wait, a race series that lets you race in a field of cars with no cages etc!? Wtf!
Mr Revhead wrote:Wait, a race series that lets you race in a field of cars with no cages etc!? Wtf!
Leon wrote:The problem isn't directly the crossing over.
The problem is that the belt should run without touching anything else from the harness mount, to your shoulder. It isn't, because it will be hard up against the seat neck hole and then going wide to your shoulders.
When you tighten those belts, what is happening? The seat fabric and frame is taking the force applied and distorting. So you're basically belting your seat fabric in place and counting on that seat fabric to hold tension between the belts and your body.
It isn't a matter of opinion either, it's directly word for word in the manual telling you you can't do what you're looking at.(a) Shoulder straps shall be of equal length and when worn should make an angle
between +10° and -10° to the horizontal, although u p to a maximum of -45° is
accepted (refer Diagram 4.3.3). The straps should rest on the wearers’ shoulders
and not on the top of the seat or the harness holes in the seat. Excessively long
shoulder straps should be avoided.
So it's worth taking a look at the rules yourself otherwise you're putting the scrutineer in the awkward position of having to tell you that you can't enter with the car in the current setup
http://www.motorsport.org.nz/assets/Mot ... A-2010.pdf page 13 of 54.
Yes, I am a rules nerd. Occupational hazard, because I was MSNZ technical employee for about 5 years, so I kind of got to know the rules fairly well.
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 20 guests