moby4dick
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #46
I’m happy to see my post has generated so much interest and great responses. Ewheels, great explanation, I knew most of your response but was unaware that the factory seats were designed that way.Hopefully this will help some who are still learning:
When it comes to safety equipment, it's all or nothing.
Factory 3pt belt plus airbags work in a crash because the 3pt belt allows your body to move forward and rotate. Then the airbag comes in and decelerates your body and keeps you in a mostly upright position.
Same with a roll over - the roof collapses but the factory seat is designed to break away, allowing your body to lay flat, avoiding injury.
Manufacturers and the NHTSA know what they're doing.
In a race car, the fixed back seat is designed to not move or break in a crash, the belts keep your body glued to the seat, the HANS keeps your neck from snapping in a front-end crash, and the roll bar/cage prevents the roof from collapsing and killing you.
Novices tend to pieces some of these together but ignore the whole picture.
Typical incomplete setups forget the HANS or the roll bar.
A crash with harnesses but without a HANS means your body is glued to the seat but your head is free to move. So in a front-end crash, your body stops moving but your head keeps going forward = your neck snaps and you die.
A roll over crash with fixed seats + harnesses but without a roll bar or cage means the roof collapses but your body cannot get out of the way. Your head and neck now become the highest point in the car = again, you die.
I know, safety equipment is expensive, but how much is your life worth to you?
The Schroth Quik Fit works like a 4pt to keep you in place while driving, yet breaks away in a crash, allowing your body to rotate like a standard 3pt.
Most if not all organizations allow these
Looks like there‘s something April 22 Pocono’s, may be a little too soon but will see. Question for you — how are you running your Sparco’s with the stock seat belt?The quick fit pro was good for a couple seasons for me. I find it kinda odd that an organization requires a novice driver to run a dedicated harness.
Try looking up your area on Track Night in America. We are very novice oriented. https://www.tracknightinamerica.com/events
I have also seen several shelby guys get holes cut into their seats and it looks professional.
I've seen and know of several guys that remove their seats for track days too.
In my case I run a set of Sparco QRT-C seats but kept the OEM seat belt and use it for when I drive on the street.
Good luck OP and enjoy your track days!
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