
Originally Posted by
Lotz-A-Landies
I think you are getting confused with newly fitted and existing seat restraints, (2 or 3 point).
If the vehicle had non-inertia reel restraints originally then they can not require them to be fitted now. However if you have inertia reel belts in a pre-1970 vehicle you will most definitely need them engineered as inertia reel didn't arrive before 1970 (or 1980 in Series Land Rover).
You will have to have a 4 or 5 point harness engineered, however that is not so much of a drama because seat belt ftting stations can usually sign them off themselves. In fact in a SII/SIIa 2 of the anchorage points in a 4 point harness* could be OEM leaving only the anchorage at the rear of the tub to be signed off.
* Remember the 4 or 5 points relate to the points on the human body, not the points of anchorage on the vehicle, e.g. in a 4 point harness the two shoulder points usually go back to a single anchorage at the rear of the passenger compartment or tub in the Land Rover.
Is there a retrospective requirement for engineering? Engineering of seat belt fittings, I suggest, did not exist prior to ADRs (about 1971) and probably, since it is state legislation, quite a bit after that, at least in some cases. This being the case, how do you determine whether, for example, inertia reel seatbelts were fitted to a 2a before or after it became necessary for them to be engineered?
This is the situation with omnibus' post - I would be very surprised if there is a requirement for them to be blue plated in Qld, or, indeed, any requirement that they meet ADRs, although there would probably be a requirement that they be in good condition under the more general provisions of the relevant act.
(All my vehicles have had seat belts since 1962 - but have only met ADRs since about 1979, which was when I first owned a car that came from the factory with them)
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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