Using seat-belt inertia lock to stay put for performance driving....how can't this be safe?

Bunch of new stuff on this thread.
I went to the linked site to see the HANS rigs. I had never heard of them.
Does the "lower head brace" part cradle your head or the helmet?
I assume the helmet and that there is a fastening point at the rear of the helmet to keep your head from going forward.
Video to come for you later today.
 
Your method makes great sense. Ignore the naysayers. They aren't thinking this through. The looseness of the seat belt is only for comfort. Automatic Locking / Emergency Locking seatbelt retractors are really a compromise, to get automobile occupants to wear their seatbelts. I suspect that if automotive safety engineers had their way we would all be buckled in with a 5 point harness, every time we get in a car. But very few would do that.

In my career I used to manage the test lab at a seat belt manufacturing facility, so I am very familiar with the different lock functions of seat belt retractors and pretensioners.

A passenger seat belt retractor has three different lock functions. First is the feature you mentioned, that is activated when you pull the seat belt webbing all the way out, and is intended primarily to hold child safety seats in place. The mechanism for this function is not in a driver's seat belt retractor. Second is a device that locks on either tilt or sudden deacceleration. It locks the seat belt in case of a rollover or a sudden braking. Third is a device that locks the seat belt on inertia. This is the one you are engaging. It locks the seat belt when your body hits the webbing quickly. The second and third devices are somewhat redundant methods to assure the occupant safety in an accident.

The pyrotechnic pretensioners are intended to pull the slack out of the seat belt webbing, so that you are properly positioned for the airbag, reducing the risk of injury from the airbag. These pretensioners are designed to limit the amount of load that they apply, to reduce the risk of body damage that you and Dnewton3 mentioned.

FMVSS regulations require a seat belt to lock up within 25 mm (this is memory from a long time ago. It might be 25.4 mm) of belt movement, once a specific acceleration is reached. So the difference in webbing slack, by you pre-engaging the seat belt, and what would happen in an accident, probably isn't all that different. It seems unlikely that you would have the webbing tight enough to result in too serious of injury from the pretensioner.
 
I'll have to see if that works on my Benz. When you first engage the seatbelts, it pulls back to measure you. It get tight and then releases some for comfort.
 
-- "They" say you shouldn't put in a 4-5 point harness without a roll cage because of the whole "your body needs to fold inward, out of the way, of the roof collapsing" thing. There are "boy racers" who put in the harness (because it impresses girls) and are "going to put the cage in later" who draw ire for doing this.

-- If you pre-set the 3-point seat belt to locked, and god forbid get in a wreck doing something fun/stupid, your insurance (car, health, life) might be more willing to pay if they can't fully reconstruct the accident. In other words, it'll look more like an accident, and less like a boy-racer out racing with racing gear on.

-- Car seat mode is achieved by pulling the 3 point all the way out, so it engages a ratchet mechanism on the return to the spool. Return it all the way, and the ratchet is released. There's a fat person on my commuter van who frequently does this accidentally and has to reset it. I highly doubt the driver's position would have this mode.

-- Seat belts are sacrificially stretchy. This helps them be "soft" in a wreck and less damaging to your organs. Pretensioners take away some of this "give" so you don't wind up too far out of place in very serious accidents, while letting the give work during slower speed ones. This is why your owners manual reads to inspect/ replace belts after even minor wrecks.
 
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-- "They" say you shouldn't put in a 4-5 point harness without a roll cage because of the whole "your body needs to fold inward, out of the way, of the roof collapsing" thing. There are "boy racers" who put in the harness (because it impresses girls) and are "going to put the cage in later" who draw ire for doing this.

-- If you pre-set the 3-point seat belt to locked, and god forbid get in a wreck doing something fun/stupid, your insurance (car, health, life) might be more willing to pay if they can't fully reconstruct the accident. In other words, it'll look more like an accident, and less like a boy-racer out racing with racing gear on.

-- Car seat mode is achieved by pulling the 3 point all the way out, so it engages a ratchet mechanism on the return to the spool. Return it all the way, and the ratchet is released. There's a fat person on my commuter van who frequently does this accidentally and has to reset it. I highly doubt the driver's position would have this mode.

-- Seat belts are sacrificially stretchy. This helps them be "soft" in a wreck and less damaging to your organs. Pretensioners take away some of this "give" so you don't wind up too far out of place in very serious accidents, while letting the give work during slower speed ones. This is why your owners manual reads to inspect/ replace belts after even minor wrecks.
While seat belt webbing does stretch, much more important in protecting the occupant from being injured by the seat belt, is a torsion bar that allows the webbing spool to continue to turn at a specific force.
 
-- "They" say you shouldn't put in a 4-5 point harness without a roll cage because of the whole "your body needs to fold inward, out of the way, of the roof collapsing" thing. There are "boy racers" who put in the harness (because it impresses girls) and are "going to put the cage in later" who draw ire for doing this.
One exception are the Schroth ASM (anti-submarine) 4 pts. They have a piece of the tail strap that opens to allow it to lengthen slightly on one side and act like a 3 pt in a crash.
 
While seat belt webbing does stretch, much more important in protecting the occupant from being injured by the seat belt, is a torsion bar that allows the webbing spool to continue to turn at a specific force.
Is the term for the stretch called "ride down"? Thats the term used by the Ford reps when they came to oversee how the Crown Vics performed at our driver training facility and mentioned it. They would also show what the webbing would look like after a collision and require replacement if we ever noticed them have that wavy, loose appearance on inspection. Some of our accident re-constructionists used that term when testifying in severe collision cases too. Just curious.
 
Ok BITOG-Kollective.....what say you? I know someone here is an expert...

When I go to the track, I use "the seatbelt trick" to keep myself more situated in my seat so I can focus on driving vs. bracing in higher G turns - using the inertial lock. You can see my process here:



This is the same procedure you use when you install a car seat in a car that doesn't have LATCH brackets. This is the same inertial lock that tightens your belt when you stab the brakes driving. So here, I am pre-engaging it. This is analagous to me driving, slamming on the brakes to avoid a crash and hitting a car - in that scenario the inertial lock will be engaged to keep you from moving before the crash. Many folks in the online track event world seem to think this is dangerous and defeats the car's safety system. I say that is not true. Many cars haver pyrotecnic pre-tensioners that fire when the air bags go to keep you even more situated. There seems to be a prevailing thought that you need to be able to move all over in the event of a crash or you will be injured (say in a rollover...you should read some of the comments! "You need to be able to move out of the way of the roof collapsing" etc.....that is exactly the opposite of what is safe, staying put is what keeps you safe in the research I've read. I reached out to the NTHSB as well as a known/trusted motorsport safety vendor. NTHSB had no data and was careful (duh!) of what they said but they didn't say it was dangerous. I reached out to VW - same. Motorsport safety guy said "no issue". Why would this be availalbe to you as a driver if doing it negated the entire safety system? The only reason your 3-pt belt allows movement is for comfort - for pure safety a harness would be the safest system. Then the folks will say you need a HANS or you'll snap your neck...I have had folks say that about this setup with the inertial lock. Craziness to me at least. What say you BIOTOG keyboard warriors?

Are you auto cross or showing up and driving on an actual racetrack? Alot of tracks require racing harnesses, helmets etc. I have an rx-7 racecar and yes If you're track racing you should be wearing a HANS Device. It's well known that had Dale Earnhardt had been wearing a hans device he would have survived his accident. From stories after his accident he didn't always pass tech but they locked the other way as he sold lots of tickets.
 
Are you auto cross or showing up and driving on an actual racetrack? Alot of tracks require racing harnesses, helmets etc. I have an rx-7 racecar and yes If you're track racing you should be wearing a HANS Device. It's well known that had Dale Earnhardt had been wearing a hans device he would have survived his accident. From stories after his accident he didn't always pass tech but they locked the other way as he sold lots of tickets.
Videos posted in this thread..scroll through. HPDE on a track. No requirement in HPDE that ive ever seen for a street car for the full cage/seat/harness in a street car. The HANS is shown I use is shown in the thread as well.
 
Is the term for the stretch called "ride down"? Thats the term used by the Ford reps when they came to oversee how the Crown Vics performed at our driver training facility and mentioned it. They would also show what the webbing would look like after a collision and require replacement if we ever noticed them have that wavy, loose appearance on inspection. Some of our accident re-constructionists used that term when testifying in severe collision cases too. Just curious.
I'm not familiar with the term "ride down". We called a seat belt retractor with this feature a 'load limiter" retractor.
 
If a pretensioner fires after your already have it tight, it’s not like it’s going to crush you against the seat. It’s going to draw a straight line between the points, both hips and above the shoulder, which aren’t so much behind you but next to you. It takes a lot of tension to provide perpendicular bracing at the middle of the belt. I would like for the airbag to catch my face, not punch me back into the seat like a 99mph baseball changing direction when it hits the bat.

Hips and shoulders gonna be sore anyway if you take a hit.

As far as collapse, if the roof collapses at those speeds, one won’t be “getting out of the way,” thats going to be fast and out of the persons control. And, the B-pillars will be collapsing with the roof in that case anyway … everything is going to be loosening up.

I learned with a few MTB accidents that once the accident hits, there’s no thinking, controlling, evading or avoidance - it all happens and then is done and you may not have a clue what was happening during - at that point Sir Isaac Newton is driving.
 
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