Oooh, that does look nice. I'm with @rsporsche, might have to pull the trigger on that. The part attached directly to the shoulder bolster is workable but it sometimes slips out when you don't want it to.
The unit is screwed in from the end. Not sure if it will stay put. You can orient it on inside or outside which ever works best.Oooh, that does look nice. I'm with @rsporsche, might have to pull the trigger on that. The part attached directly to the shoulder bolster is workable but it sometimes slips out when you don't want it to.
i think the best idea might be to get another piece (longer piece) made that attaches to the other side and bolt them together with a threaded rod. or maybe get one machined that goes from post to post using this as an idea.The unit is screwed in from the end. Not sure if it will stay put. You can orient it on inside or outside which ever works best.
I'd be a bit wary of things like this. As @eriknetherlands pointed out, the dynamics and forces of a crash are quite severe. If the belt is coming from the rear, and across the top of the seat I would think you would want to avoid interfering with it in any structural way. In a crash the body is going to move forward, hopefully straight forward, and the belt, being more or less in a straight line back should restrain it somewhat. To the extent that the belt is re-directed , the forces on the belt will be applied in some way to the structure that is redirecting the belt. In this case the metal piece will probably swing forward, dragged by the belt, and may then pose a hazard as the body moves back after the crash impulse (or worse if there are additional crash impulses, like someone rear ending you after you rear ended someone else). . Not sure I'd want a piece of metal sticking out in the same area where my neck or head are likely to come back into. I would think the softer approach, like the leather strap someone posted would be safer. If there is a lot of force on it the leather will either break or get pulled off the seat, and it is not going to injure you if you subsequently encounter it in the backlash.i think the best idea might be to get another piece (longer piece) made that attaches to the other side and bolt them together with a threaded rod. or maybe get one machined that goes from post to post using this as an idea.
as i remember, the 2002 had 'notched' headrest posts. don't remember if the coupe has them or notAfter watching all the seat belt discussion, I still like my application with one exception. Running the shoulder belt over the headrest is the right height except that in an accident the headrest could slide down. I need to find something to lock the posts from going down in an accident. Any ideas on how to lock the headrest posts?
View attachment 212188
Yes but I would rely on them not collapsing.as i remember, the 2002 had 'notched' headrest posts. don't remember if the coupe has them or not
They weren't when I bought the car. I had to remove them with a ratchet straps with the seat back secured to the base of my press.You are lucky if you can move them, mine are frozen in place![]()
I’m on the road - the shop may open tomorrow.Don, do you have a picture of those? I suspect you mean the ones underneath the headliner that many of us don't have. How much of a job is that to do? Sounds like you'd have to remove the headliner and then weld in the part then replace the headliner. What is it welded to up there - is there a structural crossbeam?