HPDE / track day safety gear flow chart !!
#61
Former Vendor
iTrader: (31)
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Sunnyvale, CA
Posts: 15,442
Total Cats: 2,103
Safety on track can be drilled down to one simple fact: Safety devices work as a system. Your 3-point belts allow your body to move in an impact, and your shoulders moving forward will naturally tighten the lap belt and pull your pelvis into the seat, preventing submarining. The airbag then catches your head and chest and prevents you from losing teeth/facial features. If you change any part of the equation (belts, seat, airbag), you lose the functionality of the entire system. Similarly, with an FIA seat+6pts+HNRS, the seat prevents the harnesses from slipping off your shoulders, the harness stops your body from moving and the HNRS stops your head from snapping off. If you don't use any one part of that system, the system stops working, and you're better off not having done anything at all.
I'm going through this with my street car after the fatality at BRP last month. I have the OEM airbag, OEM 3-points, and Elise seat (OEM belts interact with the Elise seat perfectly), which is perfect on the street. For track days, I'll have a full FIA containment seat, Schroth FIA 6-points, HNRS, and a Sparco wheel.
#62
With a harness and seat but no HNRS, the airbag is too far away to do anything except shower you with caustic powder while your head flies forward and snaps your spinal cord/breaks your skull.
Mine would, and I have the biggest babymakers on the entire internet (don't we all?). Schroth's sub straps are sewn back on themselves so they sit perpendicular to the sub strap T-bar, and they run up the insides of your thighs instead of sitting directly on your nuts. It's one of several reasons why I'll shell out the $$$ for Schroth belts in every car I own (webbing quality, adjuster quality, camlock ease of use)
Safety on track can be drilled down to one simple fact: Safety devices work as a system. Your 3-point belts allow your body to move in an impact, and your shoulders moving forward will naturally tighten the lap belt and pull your pelvis into the seat, preventing submarining. The airbag then catches your head and chest and prevents you from losing teeth/facial features. If you change any part of the equation (belts, seat, airbag), you lose the functionality of the entire system. Similarly, with an FIA seat+6pts+HNRS, the seat prevents the harnesses from slipping off your shoulders, the harness stops your body from moving and the HNRS stops your head from snapping off. If you don't use any one part of that system, the system stops working, and you're better off not having done anything at all.
I'm going through this with my street car after the fatality at BRP last month. I have the OEM airbag, OEM 3-points, and Elise seat (OEM belts interact with the Elise seat perfectly), which is perfect on the street. For track days, I'll have a full FIA containment seat, Schroth FIA 6-points, HNRS, and a Sparco wheel.
Mine would, and I have the biggest babymakers on the entire internet (don't we all?). Schroth's sub straps are sewn back on themselves so they sit perpendicular to the sub strap T-bar, and they run up the insides of your thighs instead of sitting directly on your nuts. It's one of several reasons why I'll shell out the $$$ for Schroth belts in every car I own (webbing quality, adjuster quality, camlock ease of use)
Safety on track can be drilled down to one simple fact: Safety devices work as a system. Your 3-point belts allow your body to move in an impact, and your shoulders moving forward will naturally tighten the lap belt and pull your pelvis into the seat, preventing submarining. The airbag then catches your head and chest and prevents you from losing teeth/facial features. If you change any part of the equation (belts, seat, airbag), you lose the functionality of the entire system. Similarly, with an FIA seat+6pts+HNRS, the seat prevents the harnesses from slipping off your shoulders, the harness stops your body from moving and the HNRS stops your head from snapping off. If you don't use any one part of that system, the system stops working, and you're better off not having done anything at all.
I'm going through this with my street car after the fatality at BRP last month. I have the OEM airbag, OEM 3-points, and Elise seat (OEM belts interact with the Elise seat perfectly), which is perfect on the street. For track days, I'll have a full FIA containment seat, Schroth FIA 6-points, HNRS, and a Sparco wheel.
collect your safety gear, one at a time if you need to. when your ready to install it install everything together.
it's like a DIY turbo kit. you really want a turbo, but your not going to put one under the hood until you have everything and your ready. don't lose the functionality of the oem safety system until you have a sfi/fia system ready to replace it.
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#64
my whole job is to keep you guys safe.. literally.
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#65
Supporting Vendor
iTrader: (10)
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: Bainbridge Island, WA
Posts: 1,461
Total Cats: 388
This guide doesn't say much about seats. I know you shouldn't use a 5/6 point with a stock seat. But you also shouldn't use a 3 point with a racing seat right? That puts anyone of average or above height in a predicament. To pass the broomstick test, you need a racing seat. To have a racing seat you need a racing harness and wheel and neck restraint. So if you want to try out driving on the track you are looking at a multi-$thousand investment. Is there any way around this downward spiral?
Are there aluminum seats that can be mounted super low for rollover safety and still use the 3-point/airbag combo?
Are there aluminum seats that can be mounted super low for rollover safety and still use the 3-point/airbag combo?
__________________
#68
Maybe have some vertebrae removed?
My interior progression has left me in a bad place. Started with getting a race seat to get me lower and help prevent my noggin from hitting the roll bar (NA seatback only went up to the base of my skull). Then I needed a removable steering wheel to get in and out of the car with the race seat. So now I have no airbag, a race seat, and 9 times out of 10 use the stock belt because lazy/don't want a ticket. I did remove the tear-away section of the belt, but still not ideal.
Sounds like what I really need to do is get the Elise seat and put the OEM wheel back in. And replace my seatbelt I guess. Sucks, as I really like my Momo wheel and Recaro.
My interior progression has left me in a bad place. Started with getting a race seat to get me lower and help prevent my noggin from hitting the roll bar (NA seatback only went up to the base of my skull). Then I needed a removable steering wheel to get in and out of the car with the race seat. So now I have no airbag, a race seat, and 9 times out of 10 use the stock belt because lazy/don't want a ticket. I did remove the tear-away section of the belt, but still not ideal.
Sounds like what I really need to do is get the Elise seat and put the OEM wheel back in. And replace my seatbelt I guess. Sucks, as I really like my Momo wheel and Recaro.
#69
This guide doesn't say much about seats. I know you shouldn't use a 5/6 point with a stock seat. But you also shouldn't use a 3 point with a racing seat right? That puts anyone of average or above height in a predicament. To pass the broomstick test, you need a racing seat. To have a racing seat you need a racing harness and wheel and neck restraint. So if you want to try out driving on the track you are looking at a multi-$thousand investment. Is there any way around this downward spiral?
Are there aluminum seats that can be mounted super low for rollover safety and still use the 3-point/airbag combo?
Are there aluminum seats that can be mounted super low for rollover safety and still use the 3-point/airbag combo?
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#70
Supporting Vendor
iTrader: (10)
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: Bainbridge Island, WA
Posts: 1,461
Total Cats: 388
stock seats are not fantastic by any means, they offer zero side impact protection, and only offer a mild rear collision protection. Fia seats with a 3 point i would consider an upgrade in a miata. they have much better side protection, and rear impact protection. i would only pick a seat that does not interfere with the operation of the 3 point harness. example a halo seat would not allow the shoulder strap to lay over your shoulder, so i would not recommend that set up. if you had a seat with a air bag in it, i wouldn't replace it.
__________________
#71
Senior Member
iTrader: (1)
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Farmington Hills, MI
Posts: 1,218
Total Cats: 175
What about something like a Kirkey Intermediate Road Race, set up with the lap portion of the 3-point going through the holes in the side, and a stock wheel with airbag? The shoulder portions of the seat wouldn't interfere with the shoulder belt, so would there be any drawback to using such a seat (rigged up with a back brace) with 3-point and airbag?
#72
What about something like a Kirkey Intermediate Road Race, set up with the lap portion of the 3-point going through the holes in the side, and a stock wheel with airbag? The shoulder portions of the seat wouldn't interfere with the shoulder belt, so would there be any drawback to using such a seat (rigged up with a back brace) with 3-point and airbag?
follow these instructions for installing aluminum seats.
Mini Stock Seat Install - Installing Safety Upgrades in Project City Boy - Circle Track Magazine
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#73
There is a reason I didn't talk about seat much. you would be surprised, but NASA (and many other organizations) do not have a concise rule for seats !!
a friend that races in Miata. Raced in PTE with foam as a seat, yeap, foam. and this is w2w.
if you watch many dedicated race cars, you will also see all form of weird looking "seats".
a friend that races in Miata. Raced in PTE with foam as a seat, yeap, foam. and this is w2w.
if you watch many dedicated race cars, you will also see all form of weird looking "seats".
#74
There is a reason I didn't talk about seat much. you would be surprised, but NASA (and many other organizations) do not have a concise rule for seats !!
a friend that races in Miata. Raced in PTE with foam as a seat, yeap, foam. and this is w2w.
if you watch many dedicated race cars, you will also see all form of weird looking "seats".
a friend that races in Miata. Raced in PTE with foam as a seat, yeap, foam. and this is w2w.
if you watch many dedicated race cars, you will also see all form of weird looking "seats".
3 point belts with race seats are usually a no-no, because it's very rare that the belts actually sit snuggly against the hips, shoulders and waists of the drivers, rendering the belts pretty useless. You can route the lap belt through the holes, but even then the side supports almost always infringe on the correct engagement of the shoulder belt.
I know the flow chart mentions going to trackhq.com with questions, but I think it's equally important to contact the organization directly that a person plans to run with. Different organizations have different minimum requirements, and it's always worth checking with their head of tech to see if what they have (or plan to do) is sufficient, especially now that tracks are also starting to get strict with their own rules. Of course, it's never bad to go above and beyond what an organization requires (like those shitty ones that don't even require roll bars).
#75
There's so many variables, and basically comes down to the region's race tech/head of HPDE tech inspector.
3 point belts with race seats are usually a no-no, because it's very rare that the belts actually sit snuggly against the hips, shoulders and waists of the drivers, rendering the belts pretty useless. You can route the lap belt through the holes, but even then the side supports almost always infringe on the correct engagement of the shoulder belt.
I know the flow chart mentions going to trackhq.com with questions, but I think it's equally important to contact the organization directly that a person plans to run with. Different organizations have different minimum requirements, and it's always worth checking with their head of tech to see if what they have (or plan to do) is sufficient, especially now that tracks are also starting to get strict with their own rules. Of course, it's never bad to go above and beyond what an organization requires (like those shitty ones that don't even require roll bars).
3 point belts with race seats are usually a no-no, because it's very rare that the belts actually sit snuggly against the hips, shoulders and waists of the drivers, rendering the belts pretty useless. You can route the lap belt through the holes, but even then the side supports almost always infringe on the correct engagement of the shoulder belt.
I know the flow chart mentions going to trackhq.com with questions, but I think it's equally important to contact the organization directly that a person plans to run with. Different organizations have different minimum requirements, and it's always worth checking with their head of tech to see if what they have (or plan to do) is sufficient, especially now that tracks are also starting to get strict with their own rules. Of course, it's never bad to go above and beyond what an organization requires (like those shitty ones that don't even require roll bars).
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#77
With a 3-point, torso pressure against the cross-torso portion of the belt tends to tighten the lap portion DOWNWARD against the hips. There is no force or tendency for the lap portion to move upward into the soft tissue. The dynamics are completely different than a 4-point where pressure on the shoulder belts pulls the buckle and lap portions upward.
#78
I'm going through this with my street car after the fatality at BRP last month. I have the OEM airbag, OEM 3-points, and Elise seat (OEM belts interact with the Elise seat perfectly), which is perfect on the street. For track days, I'll have a full FIA containment seat, Schroth FIA 6-points, HNRS, and a Sparco wheel.
I need to do something similar for track days on the Silver car. Swapping the seats and belts is a simple bolt-in solution that I can do in about 15 minutes prior to going to the track. But swapping the steering wheel seems more involved. Is there some trick I'm missing?
I cruised the Silver car around the track on Sunday. It sucked. Spent all my time trying to stay in position on the m.net Katskin-covered OEM seat. I've never come off track thinking to myself "that sucked" before.
#79
Regarding the steering wheel question -- compare:
OTOH, JKAV (working on a 1997 -- which perhaps doesn't have breakaway belts?) says:
"Whatever the reason, the last straw in our case was that the leather on our stock 128k-mile wheel was delaminating and pockmarked like Edward James Olmos' face, and the two probably felt similar. It had to go. Yes, the airbag goes with it, and I'm okay with that, as airbags of this era were designed for unbelted occupants and so deployed with considerably more force than today's bags. I'll stay belted, remove the bomb and save myself the broken arm, thanks. But with what to replace the stock wheel?"
Momo Wheel Gory Details - 1997 Mazda MX-5 Miata Long-Term Road Test
Based upon everything I've seen -- and also what I did on the red car to convert it to dedicated track use -- it's not really feasible to swap back and forth between the OEM airbag steering wheel and a track steering wheel. So, would the safe answer to running something like a Momo on the street in a 1990 Miata be to install non-breakaway 3 points? Non-breakaway belts are available from Mazda.
Another thing I noticed is that my 1990 has original breakaway belts on both the driver's side (with airbag) and the passenger's side (without airbag but with a bit more distance before there is something to hit).
So . . . ???
"Whatever the reason, the last straw in our case was that the leather on our stock 128k-mile wheel was delaminating and pockmarked like Edward James Olmos' face, and the two probably felt similar. It had to go. Yes, the airbag goes with it, and I'm okay with that, as airbags of this era were designed for unbelted occupants and so deployed with considerably more force than today's bags. I'll stay belted, remove the bomb and save myself the broken arm, thanks. But with what to replace the stock wheel?"
Momo Wheel Gory Details - 1997 Mazda MX-5 Miata Long-Term Road Test
Based upon everything I've seen -- and also what I did on the red car to convert it to dedicated track use -- it's not really feasible to swap back and forth between the OEM airbag steering wheel and a track steering wheel. So, would the safe answer to running something like a Momo on the street in a 1990 Miata be to install non-breakaway 3 points? Non-breakaway belts are available from Mazda.
Another thing I noticed is that my 1990 has original breakaway belts on both the driver's side (with airbag) and the passenger's side (without airbag but with a bit more distance before there is something to hit).
So . . . ???