Borked wrote:mr2 spyder wrote:Borked wrote:I've a Syd local that builds cages for Speedway action looking into a full street legal cage.
If you like, I can give you an introduction to him to discuss your desires further.
May help me when I've the $$$ to get the cage done.
Irrelevant where you get it done, if they don't insist upon mounting the seats to the cage, turn around and run, as they've obviously NFI !
Sorry I have NFI. how do you mount seats to cage?
The cage is your life preserver.
You want to stay within that, not the disintegrating body around it.
Also, you've probably harnesses mounted to the cage, they're useless if the body and cage separate, aren't they ;)
I apologise if I come across as condescending upon this one, yet until recently I didn't even know this and am surprised by how many places that thrust a professional image forward fail this simple concept and couldn't live with myself if I didn't share safety information with the members here...
Borked wrote:
Any roll protection needs to incorporate seat mounts as a part of it, otherwise it might as well be a WRX bling special.
Think about it and I'm sure you will realise why you WANT your seat mounted to your rollcage...
I suggest you think about it some more.
I am not saying that, in all cases, a seat should not be mounted to the cage. I am saying that it is not necessary in all cases. Not being an engineer who studies the design of these, I suspect it is a case of horses for courses. A modern car's structure has been designed to safeguard the occupants through seating and belt mounts that can handle a big impact. You would not say the same about say an Elan, and if I was building a cage for an Elan I would be looking closely at the seat AND the harness mounts.
Having said that, it needs to be remembered that the basic principle is energy absorbion, which means that the structure does move in an accident. That obviously has implications for seat and harness mounts.
I would be careful about generalisations on this complex issue. I would defer to people who have looked at it with more careful and better eyes than mine. In this context I am not aware of any requirements along these lines from CAMS, for what that is worth.
If anyone is building a cage, and is concerned about seat and harness mounts, I suggest they get better advice than can be found on the interwebs ...
