| Tip
#6 Is your safety seat secure in
the car?
To do its job, a child
safety seat must be held securely against the vehicle
seat back. If the lap part of the safety belt is not
tight or the safety seat slides around on the vehicle
seat, your child may not be protected.
Always read the
instructions that come with the safety seat. Also read
the section on safety belts and child safety seats (child
restraints) in your vehicle owner's book (A). If
you cannot attach your seat tightly, call your vehicle
customer service number for help or the Auto Safety
Hotline at 1-800-424-9393.
WARNING: Children age 12 and under
should ride in the back seat. Never put an infant
(less than one year old) rear facing in the front of a
car with a passenger air bag. Infants must always
ride in the back seat facing the rear of the car.
How Tightly Should a
Safety Seat Be Attached?
The lap part of the belt
must hold the safety seat firmly in place. To make it
tight, push the safety seat down into the seat cushion
while you tighten the belt around it. Push down on it
with your full weight to get the belt really tight (B)
(D).
To check for a tight fit,
pull the safety seat forward and push it from side to
side. If the belt loosens (C) or the base of the
safety seat slides forward or sideward more than an inch,
your child may not be well protected.
If the safety seat
moves, first try another seat location in your
vehicle with a different kind of belt. The lap belt in
the middle of the back seat may work best to keep your
safety seat in place.
Which Kinds of Belts
Are in Your Vehicle?
There are lap belts
that hold the hips and lap/shoulder belts that
hold the hips and one shoulder. There are several kinds
of retractors to take up slack and latchplates
that fit in the buckle. Read the following pages for the
ways the belts, retractors, and latchplates in vehicles
work.
Many vehicles have belts
that stay loose while you drive and lock up in a crash.
This sheet will tell you how to make this kind of belt
stay tight.
The owner's manual for
recent vehicles tells you about using belts for child
safety seats. Starting with the 1996 model year, vehicles
MUST have safety belts designed to stay tight
around safety seats.
How to Check If A Belt
Retractor Locks
There are two kinds of
retractors that take up slack in the belt:
- An "emergency
locking retractor" locks only during a crash
or sudden stop. During normal driving you can
pull the belt in and out easily. Check it in a
deserted parking lot with your lap/shoulder belt
on. If you slam on the brakes while driving about
10 mph, you will feel the belt "grab"
you.
- An "automatic
locking retractor" locks whenever you stop
pulling it out. To check for an automatic locking
retractor, pull the lap belt out and stop. When
you pull on it again, you will find it is locked.
This kind of belt will hold the safety seat
tightly. Take the slack out by pushing the
webbing back into the retractor.
"Switchable"
Retractors
A switchable retractor
works well with safety seats. It is an emergency locking
retractor that can be switched to an automatic locking
retractor. The retractor may be on either a lap belt or a
lap/shoulder belt. The belt usually has a label on it
telling you how it works (I). You also can read
about it in your vehicle owner's book.
In most cases, you switch
the retractor by pulling the belt slowly all the way out
until it goes no farther and you hear a click. It may
pull out from the lap end or shoulder end. When you let
the belt roll back, you will find that it locks every
inch or so and will hold a safety seat tightly. In some
vehicles, there is a button to push on the retractor
instead. Again, check in the owner's book.
Belts with Locking
Latchplates
Locking latchplates (E)
work well with safety seats. They usually are found on
lap belts in center rear seats. Lap/shoulder belts in
many vehicles also have them. A locking bar prevents the
belt from loosening once it is tightened.
To tighten this kind of
belt, pull on the loose end of the lap belt or on the
shoulder part of the lap/shoulder belt. This tightens the
lap belt. Then test for tightness by
pulling the safety seat forward and side to side.
If this kind of belt does
not stay tight, see if the latchplate is fastened right
at the place where the belt turns to go through the slot
in the safety seat (F) or around its frame.
In this position, the belt may slide through the
latchplate. Turn the adjustable end of the belt over (G).
This will keep it tightly locked in most
vehicles. This also may help keep the belt from loosening
slowly over time.
Lap/Shoulder Belt with
a Free-Sliding Latchplate
This kind of belt (H)
has one piece of belt webbing that slides through the
latchplate even when the belt is buckled. It usually has
an emergency locking retractor. It stays loose except in
a crash or sudden stop. To lock this belt around a child
safety seat, use a metal "locking clip." Some
belts are labeled to tell you the locking clip is needed (I).
First check to see if it has a switchable retractor that
allows the retractor to stay locked (see above).
How to Install a
Locking Clip on a Lap/Shoulder Belt With a Free-Sliding
Latchplate
If the lap/shoulder belt (H)
does not have a switchable feature to lock it around a
child safety seat, you should use a metal "locking
clip" (J) to keep it tight. You will find
this clip attached to the side or back of most new safety
seats. If you do not have a locking clip, you can buy one
from a safety seat manufacturer or from Ford, Nissan, or
Toyota dealers. Here is how to install the clip (J).
- Put the belt through
the correct path on the safety seat
and buckle it.
- Push down on the
safety seat. Pull up on the shoulder end of the
belt until the lap belt is pulled tight.
- Hold the two parts of
the belt together at the latchplate
and unbuckle it.
- Thread the belt
through the locking clip as shown,
close to the latchplate.
- Buckle the belt again.
If you put the clip on right, the belt
will now stay tight around the safety seat.
- Remove the locking
clip when the belt is not holding a safety seat.
The regular locking
clip that comes with most child safety
seats must be used in this way only.
Belts That Do Not Lock
Belts with emergency
locking retractors in the lap part of the belt stay loose.
These belts do not have switchable retractors (see
above) and need a special belt-shortening clip (heavy-duty
locking clip) to shorten the lap belt (see below).
Such belts are:
- Lap belts in front
seats of many cars that have
automatic shoulder belts;
- Lap belts in rear
seats of some older cars;
- Often on belts with
lap and shoulder belts sewn onto
the latchplate (P, see below). These
latchplates
may be found in front or rear seats.
Automatic Safety Belts
Some automatic shoulder
belts are attached to the door and wrap around you when
you close the door (K). Others have a motor which
moves them along a track above the door (L) when
you turn on the vehicle. The best way to avoid problems
with these belts is to buckle up children in the back
seat.
Most automatic shoulder
belts have separate lap belts. Some of these lap belts
lock, but many do not. Some are "switchable" (see
below). Some vehicles (Cougar, Thunderbird, 1989-93;
some Nissans) offer a separate "child seat buckle"
to use with the front seat lap belt to hold a safety seat.
Where both the lap
and shoulder belts are attached to the door (M),
as in many GM and some Nissan and Honda cars, they should
not be used to secure a child safety seat. To
anchor a child safety seat, it is necessary for your car
dealer to install a special "attaching belt."
Contoured Bucket Seats
and Child Safety Seats
Some vehicle seats have
hollows and humps that prevent the safety seat from
resting flat on the cushion. Use another position if
possible, or find a safety seat with a base that fits
better in your car.
Always check your vehicle owner's
book for belt information.
Belts Anchored Forward
of the Seat Back
Belts that come out of the
seat cushion or from the side of the vehicle seat (N)
may not hold your child's safety seat against the vehicle
seat back. Test your child's seat by pulling it forward
and sideways. If the base moves, use a different seating
position unless your vehicle owner's book shows you how
to make the belt system hold a child safety seat securely.
A tether may help.
A Tether Can Help Keep
A Safety Seat Secure
A top tether strap (O)
anchors the upper part of a forward-facing child safety
seat when it is bolted to the frame of the vehicle. It
may be the only way to keep a safety seat secure if belts
are anchored forward of the seat back. A tether aids
protection even when the safety seat is held firmly with
the lap belt.
Some manufacturers have
tether kits for their forward-facing safety seats. Do not
attempt to install a tether on a safety seat not made to
use one. Many vehicles have holes drilled behind the rear
seat to hold a tether anchor. Some have nuts installed.
Check the owner's manual for tether anchor locations.
Lap and Shoulder Belts
Sewn to the Latchplate
Some belts have the lap
and shoulder parts sewn separately to the latchplate (P).
Check to see if the lap belt can be locked or "switched"
to one that locks (see above). If not, use a
special heavy-duty locking clip to shorten the lap part
of the belt (see below).
How to Shorten Lap
Belts That Do Not Lock
If a lap belt or lap part
of a lap/shoulder belt with a sewn-on latchplate does not
lock and cannot be "switched," you can shorten
the belt to make it the right length to hold your safety
seat tightly.
You will need a special
belt-shortening clip ("heavy-duty" locking
clip, Q). This special clip is available only
from Ford, Toyota, and Nissan dealers. Your vehicle
owner's book may explain how to use it. (Toyota locking
clips come with instructions.)
This heavy-duty clip looks
just like a regular locking clip but is made from extra-strong
metal. Some are a little bigger, about three inches long.
If you buy a heavy-duty clip, mark it with a dab of nail
polish or paint so you will know which kind it is.
WARNING: Use ONLY a heavy-duty
locking clip to shorten a lap belt. Use of a regular
locking clip to do this would put your child in serious
danger in a crash. The regular clip could bend and
release the belt, leading to possible serious injury.
Use a locking clip to
shorten a belt only if you know that it came from Ford,
Toyota, Nissan and you have instructions for using it. If
you have questions about how to use locking clips or
keeping child restraints tightly secured in your vehicle,
call your vehicle customer service line.
Q
The only way you can tell for sure
that you have a heavy-duty locking clip is to see if it
is this size. Some are less than 3 inches long but are
not marked. You would not be able to tell the difference
from a regular clip.
|