In some of the seats the headrest is raised to where the shoulder belt guide is a few inches from the child's shoulder. And some you have shown the headrest is located so the belt guide is right at or above the shoulder. I have found alot of seats that the seat belt does not retract in and out easily no matter what position the head rest is in. Or the height or location of the seat belt on the wall of the vehicle. No one seems to address if the seat belt must absolutely be retracting as easily as it would without a booster, or if the belt guide is allowed to be pinched or twisted. Again preventing the belt from retracting or even moving once the child is all buckled in. Does the height of the head rest matter for the belt guide to be right at the child's shoulders as you would using a forward facing harness? Or as you have shown the head rest and belt guide a few inches above the shoulder fine as long as there is proper belt fit between neck and shoulder, and provided the seatbelt retracts freely?
Jmac Jonez Up to a certain age I think they are safer Going by what Halfords recently told us when getting one for my rather large four yr old grandson. We tried to keep him in the harness as long as possible but he's too big now for one. I think it's standard with them all as we couldn't find one.
@Fearn and Tucker’s Angel Forever I babysit frequently several age ranges in elementary and I don't know of a single 6 year old which is an average kindergarten/1st grade who is big enough to sit correctly in a regular seat I don't even know of but maybe 2 or 3 5th graders big enough to sit in a seat correctly and I have watched several the earliest I can say I have seen a kid big enough even with helping with car riders at the school would be a 4th grader that was very big for his age 90%ile if not more than that and even then he was barely able to fit correctly so no 6 or 7 year old should ever be out of a children's car seat of some sourt period
@Fearn and Tucker’s Angel Forever also apparently you need to watch some videos of crash testing being done when a child is not in the appropriate seat for their size/age it's not pretty so please go educate yourself and keep those kids in seats longer before someone kids killed by your stupidity
The safest way to travel is to leave your kid rearfacing as long as posible(4-5) depending on their hight and weight, and the switch to a high back booster with regular seatbelt actually, when they out grow their rear facing 5 point harness. There is a reason why adult are not in a five point, the seat belt of the car is much safer, used in the right way. I know beacuse I had to look it up my self. Car safety is a passion of mine now.
In some of the seats the headrest is raised to where the shoulder belt guide is a few inches from the child's shoulder. And some you have shown the headrest is located so the belt guide is right at or above the shoulder. I have found alot of seats that the seat belt does not retract in and out easily no matter what position the head rest is in. Or the height or location of the seat belt on the wall of the vehicle. No one seems to address if the seat belt must absolutely be retracting as easily as it would without a booster, or if the belt guide is allowed to be pinched or twisted. Again preventing the belt from retracting or even moving once the child is all buckled in. Does the height of the head rest matter for the belt guide to be right at the child's shoulders as you would using a forward facing harness? Or as you have shown the head rest and belt guide a few inches above the shoulder fine as long as there is proper belt fit between neck and shoulder, and provided the seatbelt retracts freely?
Yes it’s true 0:44
What about harnessed boosters? Those are safer.
Jmac Jonez
Up to a certain age I think they are safer
Going by what Halfords recently told us when getting one for my rather large four yr old grandson. We tried to keep him in the harness as long as possible but he's too big now for one. I think it's standard with them all as we couldn't find one.
@Fearn and Tucker’s Angel Forever I guess you are one of those parents who don't need kids as you don't care about their safety
@Fearn and Tucker’s Angel Forever I babysit frequently several age ranges in elementary and I don't know of a single 6 year old which is an average kindergarten/1st grade who is big enough to sit correctly in a regular seat I don't even know of but maybe 2 or 3 5th graders big enough to sit in a seat correctly and I have watched several the earliest I can say I have seen a kid big enough even with helping with car riders at the school would be a 4th grader that was very big for his age 90%ile if not more than that and even then he was barely able to fit correctly so no 6 or 7 year old should ever be out of a children's car seat of some sourt period
@Fearn and Tucker’s Angel Forever also apparently you need to watch some videos of crash testing being done when a child is not in the appropriate seat for their size/age it's not pretty so please go educate yourself and keep those kids in seats longer before someone kids killed by your stupidity
The safest way to travel is to leave your kid rearfacing as long as posible(4-5) depending on their hight and weight, and the switch to a high back booster with regular seatbelt actually, when they out grow their rear facing 5 point harness. There is a reason why adult are not in a five point, the seat belt of the car is much safer, used in the right way. I know beacuse I had to look it up my self. Car safety is a passion of mine now.
«For a typical 48 year old child»
Wait, what?
She said 4-8 year old child.
1:23
怎麼了
那兩個兒童假人有什麼危險