Seat belt guides

General chat about the car goes in here.
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ga.spyder
Posts: 3478
Joined: Tue Nov 06, 2007 7:19 pm
Your car is a: 1982 Spider 2000
Location: Blairsville ,Ga.

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by ga.spyder »

You the man,Brady !!!
Craig Nelson

1982 Spider 2000...pride and joy
1981 Fiat X1/9..gone but not forgotten
1976 124 Spider..the self-healer
2001 BMW 328ci daily driver and track car
Fling It Around Turns !
azygoustoyou

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by azygoustoyou »

All right, here's what i got. These are 5/16'' steel. They should last forever. I need input on what you think. Is the loop in a good position. How much room is between the seat and side. We don't them to hit anything. I figure if these don't go past the seat hinges on the bottom. They should be fine. I don't have a car to check. I can make this loop closer to the headrest if desired. Just let me know. I know a couple people wanted them to the side. There's no way the seat will come out of this. If this is what you all want, as soon as you give me the feedback, I'll make them. :P Same price as before.
I also can put it either in front or in back of the headrest which would move it about 1/2 inch forward. Specify placement.
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rlux4
Patron 2022
Patron 2022
Posts: 4211
Joined: Thu Jan 10, 2008 8:32 pm
Your car is a: 1982 2000 Spider
Location: Granite Falls, Wa

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by rlux4 »

Now you're talking! I like the way you've got it swept down slightly, it gives it a good look and appears to be in a better position.
Ron
Ron Luxmore
rlux2n2@gmail.com
'82 2000 Spider: after 26 years between Spiders.
User avatar
Kingme2
Posts: 291
Joined: Tue Aug 11, 2009 1:04 am
Your car is a: 1980 124 Spider
Location: Calgary, Alberta

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by Kingme2 »

VERY NICE
Due to recent budget cuts and the rising cost of electricity, gas, and oil, we have decided to turn off the light at the end of the tunnel. We apologize for any inconvenience.

1981 Fiat Spider, all black... "Corvino", italian for the Raven
User avatar
ga.spyder
Posts: 3478
Joined: Tue Nov 06, 2007 7:19 pm
Your car is a: 1982 Spider 2000
Location: Blairsville ,Ga.

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by ga.spyder »

Brady,they look good.How is it attached,do the post for the headrest go thru the guide?Thanks and good job.
Craig
Craig Nelson

1982 Spider 2000...pride and joy
1981 Fiat X1/9..gone but not forgotten
1976 124 Spider..the self-healer
2001 BMW 328ci daily driver and track car
Fling It Around Turns !
azygoustoyou

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by azygoustoyou »

I need to know if you guys want these. I'm not going to make them if your not interested. PM me.
rlux4
Patron 2022
Patron 2022
Posts: 4211
Joined: Thu Jan 10, 2008 8:32 pm
Your car is a: 1982 2000 Spider
Location: Granite Falls, Wa

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by rlux4 »

Do you have a price figured out yet?
Ron
Ron Luxmore
rlux2n2@gmail.com
'82 2000 Spider: after 26 years between Spiders.
azygoustoyou

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by azygoustoyou »

Hi Ron,
It would be the same price as before mentioned. $50 + shipping. It takes time to heat and shape these things.
If anyone likes the first design and would like them, just let me know when you PM me.

Please understand I can make these either sit infront of the headrest or behind it. I need to know which way you would like it. If not mentioned, I will just place it behind the headrest. Thx. :P
User avatar
ga.spyder
Posts: 3478
Joined: Tue Nov 06, 2007 7:19 pm
Your car is a: 1982 Spider 2000
Location: Blairsville ,Ga.

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by ga.spyder »

I have mine on order...as usual the 82's lead the pack! :lol:
Craig
ps ..Brady behind the headrest for mine,I am already used to it being there.
Craig Nelson

1982 Spider 2000...pride and joy
1981 Fiat X1/9..gone but not forgotten
1976 124 Spider..the self-healer
2001 BMW 328ci daily driver and track car
Fling It Around Turns !
azygoustoyou

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by azygoustoyou »

Hi Craig,
The cheapest shipping is about $11 at the P.O. They wouldn't fit in the $5 box. I have your set done.
:P
radiopilot

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by radiopilot »

Hi all... I had a little time to waste... here is what I came up with on my CAD system, I amn going to check what tooling costs will be for a billet aluminum with anodized finish in various colors. Getting quotes soon for production costs and lead times.

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What do you think?

Nick
azygoustoyou

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by azygoustoyou »

It looks nice! I was thinking of making the inside of my first design something like that. But then I thought, that is the area where the seat belt will have the most tension. It could pinch the clip or maybe even come out.
radiopilot

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by radiopilot »

Thanks... I think you are right about the belt getting loose, I just changed the design to allow the seat belt to install via the outer portion but the seat belt must be easily removed for safety purposes, of all the convertible car seat belts design I've look at they provide a way of getting the seat belt off quickly for access.

For loads I can assume a 250 LB person at 3g's in an accident and the clip could not go plastic and bend/break all the loads on the clip will be transferred to the headrest rods (2)... will model this on my ANSYS stress program an come up with some numbers...

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Nick
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kilrwail
Posts: 1100
Joined: Wed Mar 04, 2009 6:49 am
Your car is a: 1978 Fiat 124 Sport Spider
Location: Perth, Ontario

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by kilrwail »

Guys - I hate to interefere with all your fun, but I have a concern. The stock plastic guide is only a guide - it is not load-bearing. The person's shoulder should be the load-bearing device, as it is for a HANS device. And, the stock guide is open on the inside end, so the belt can move towards the headrest if required to properly fit over the shoulder. If you build it out of steel or aluminum with the opening on the outside and it fails to protect the occupant, who will be liable in the event of a serious injury? Sorry to be a wet blanket, but I'm concerned about safety more than aesthetics.
_____________________________________________________________
Peter Brownhill

1978 Fiat 124 Sport Spider - original owner
1977 Porsche 911S - track car
2022 Ram 4 x 4 - hauler
PCA National Instructor and Motorsport Safety Foundation Level 2 Instructor
radiopilot

Re: Seat belt guides

Post by radiopilot »

kilrwail wrote:the stock guide is open on the inside end, so the belt can move towards the headrest if required to properly fit over the shoulder. If you build it out of steel or aluminum with the opening on the outside and it fails to protect the occupant, who will be liable in the event of a serious injury?
I understand the safety aspect, the original plastic design was made to be open in the center to remove the belt easily, for saftey and or access, the load in an accident would put most of the load on to the seatbelt bracket and the top of the seat, hopefully if the seatbelt retract/rachet mechanism is working (not binding) the seatbelt should rachet and lock. The seatbelt guide would see some of these loads but not much either way the seatbelt guide will twist but by how much... this we will know soon.

Nick
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