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-   -   Harness bar (https://www.scoobynet.com/interior-15/1042208-harness-bar.html)

jfreer 29 September 2016 07:05 AM

Harness bar
 
Is anyone selling a harness bar and harness to fit a blobeye?

neil-h 01 October 2016 08:05 PM

I wouldn't touch one personally, they're all kinds of dangerous.

Jay Cartay 01 October 2016 08:55 PM


Originally Posted by neil-h (Post 11880778)
I wouldn't touch one personally, they're all kinds of dangerous.

Why's that?

neil-h 02 October 2016 08:37 AM

It ultimately all comes down to what happens in a crash and the assumption that odds are he wants a harness bar to use harnesses with out a full cage. When all is said and done there's a vast number of scenarios where really nasty things can happen that wouldn't have happened without harnesses.

Jay Cartay 02 October 2016 10:52 PM

I'm thinking about one myself as the car will be entered in the road going production class for hillclimbing so no cage at this point. I would have thought a harness bar would be a useful bit of kit?

stonejedi 03 October 2016 12:10 PM

It is if you have no intention to ever have rear seat passengers again,I think that is why the member said they are dangerous.For just you and a front seat passenger their is not a problem and it's a perfect solution for harnesses.SJ.

Jay Cartay 03 October 2016 12:20 PM

OK that's fine then, the car won't be carrying any people who may have their faces mashed into it :D

Dubzy 03 October 2016 11:11 PM

A harness bar will be strong enough to hold you in place when driving but offers very little protection in the event of a crash. I looked into getting one and decided against it, In a medium to hard front end collision you could easily end up hitting the steering wheel. A seat belt is a much safer option. If its for occasional track day use then you would be better off making something up and mounting the harness to the rear seatbelt mounting points.

neil-h 04 October 2016 06:51 PM


Originally Posted by stonejedi (Post 11881076)
It is if you have no intention to ever have rear seat passengers again,I think that is why the member said they are dangerous.For just you and a front seat passenger their is not a problem and it's a perfect solution for harnesses.SJ.

I'd completely forgotten about this thread :lol1:

Anywho. At the end of the day you really need to go the whole hog or not at all. The last thing you want is to be firmly strapped into the drivers seat if the car is going to collapse around you in a crash. Then there's the amount of force you're putting through your neck in a front end impact assuming you're not using a HANS device.

stonejedi 04 October 2016 06:59 PM


Originally Posted by neil-h (Post 11881461)
I'd completely forgotten about this thread :lol1:

Anywho. At the end of the day you really need to go the whole hog or not at all. The last thing you want is to be firmly strapped into the drivers seat if the car is going to collapse around you in a crash. Then there's the amount of force you're putting through your neck in a front end impact assuming you're not using a HANS device.

I agree with you about fitting a complete solution i.e a Rollcage,but for the sole purpose of fitting a pair of harnesses a harness bar is completely Fine,i don't think anyone in their right mind would fit a harness bar for Crash protection...they would have to be a complete Dick head to think that a harness bar would save their life with their car on its roof Lol;).SJ.

Jay Cartay 04 October 2016 09:08 PM

Thing is, you can't put a cage in and compete in the road going class in hillclimbing, as far as I am aware. It would have to be Production Modified or something along those lines.

I had no idea people considered a harness bar unsafe though. It's attached to the car in multiple locations so I'd have thought it would hold better than the shoulder strap seatbelt mounting if anything.

Dubzy 04 October 2016 09:22 PM


Originally Posted by Jay Cartay (Post 11881515)
Thing is, you can't put a cage in and compete in the road going class in hillclimbing, as far as I am aware. It would have to be Production Modified or something along those lines.

I had no idea people considered a harness bar unsafe though. It's attached to the car in multiple locations so I'd have thought it would hold better than the shoulder strap seatbelt mounting if anything.


https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.sco...22c565e40a.jpg

Sparco bar after a meduim front ender.

stonejedi 04 October 2016 09:31 PM

What do Sparco make their harness bar out of?...Paper Mache.SJ.

Jay Cartay 05 October 2016 11:02 AM

That doesn't look good but surely it wouldn't bend like that from a straightforward front smash as the force wouldn't be in the spot where the bar has bent? Looks very strange.

JGlanzaV 05 October 2016 11:46 AM

They are dangerous without a rollcage as said above.

Would not ever consider fitting one to my car or using it!

The whole point is if you flip the car the normal seatbelt allows you to slide down as the roof comes in, a harness and harness bar will not allow that.harness' with a cage do not need to let you slide down as the roof shouldnt come in on you.

Much the same as in a front impact the cage transfers energy around you and the impact force on the person is less, where as a harness bar will not do that and likely to fold/impale/cause neck injury, let alone the massive internal damage possible from rapid deceleration. This is why seatbelts stretch etc to slow the deceleration of your internal organs.

Wouldnt catch me in a car in harnesses without a rollcage, or for that fact in a car with a cage and no harness!!!!! Both equally dangerous.

And also i doubt the msa would let you run a harness bar unless approved etc?

Jay Cartay 05 October 2016 11:54 AM

I think you can, but yeah doesn't sound like such an attractive option now.

Will a seatbelt still fasten up securely when using bucket seats? Without having them here to look at I don't know how deep the bolsters are.

stonejedi 05 October 2016 12:50 PM


Originally Posted by Jay Cartay (Post 11881651)
I think you can, but yeah doesn't sound like such an attractive option now.

Will a seatbelt still fasten up securely when using bucket seats? Without having them here to look at I don't know how deep the bolsters are.





If a harness bar is the way you are thinking of doing it...Go for it.Their has been alot of scaremongering on this thread:),i have a few mates that have a harness bar fitted to their cars for years now and they do track days on a regular with zero problems,even Frayz had one fitted to his Bomber for years until he decided to go full WRC cage,So my advice is if you want one fitted...as it is part of "your" plans then go for it:thumb: i doubt you will be dooming yourself to destruction,i hope not anyway:lol1:.SJ.

Dubzy 05 October 2016 03:14 PM

I wasnt trying to scaremonger, was just making sure the op was aware of the safety aspects of having one fitted. I decided safety outweighed function and thats why i decided against having one fitted. I would of liked the extra support too for trackdays but without having a cage fitted, which i wont because its still a road car, the factory seatbelt is the safest option. I just lower my seat to the lowest position, put my belt on and then raise the seat and i find that holds me in place very well :thumb:

frayz 06 October 2016 05:40 AM

Killer B now make one which picks up on the C pillars and goes basically across the top of the parcel shelf. It doesn't interfere with any of the rear seat area and you can take passengers without any safety issues.
My car never had rear seats so was never a problem.

domino46 06 October 2016 07:28 AM


Originally Posted by stonejedi (Post 11881663)
If a harness bar is the way you are thinking of doing it...Go for it.Their has been alot of scaremongering on this thread:),i have a few mates that have a harness bar fitted to their cars for years now and they do track days on a regular with zero problems,even Frayz had one fitted to his Bomber for years until he decided to go full WRC cage,So my advice is if you want one fitted...as it is part of "your" plans then go for it:thumb: i doubt you will be dooming yourself to destruction,i hope not anyway:lol1:.SJ.

Have any of your mates had major crashes while the harness bar has been fitted??? , as all the problems relate to accidents so of course they wouldn't of had any problems if they haven't crashed lol ,, info from someone who has had a nice crash with one fitted would be good ,,, I had a hard front end smash in my blob with harnesses fitted (fitted properly but no harness bar or rear seats) and one of the eye holes they are attached to was ripped clean out of the mounting so I use my seat belts now lol

neil-h 06 October 2016 09:31 AM


Originally Posted by stonejedi (Post 11881466)
I agree with you about fitting a complete solution i.e a Rollcage,but for the sole purpose of fitting a pair of harnesses a harness bar is completely Fine,i don't think anyone in their right mind would fit a harness bar for Crash protection...they would have to be a complete Dick head to think that a harness bar would save their life with their car on its roof Lol;).SJ.

It's not just putting the car on its roof though. If you have a big front end impact (I.e. Into a tyre wall) then an inertia reel belt will decelerate the whole body slowly. A harness (without HANS device) keeps everything still, except the head. So your neck is now doing the job of a seatbelt and trying to stop the mass of your head/helmet in a crash.


Originally Posted by frayz (Post 11881919)
Killer B now make one which picks up on the C pillars and goes basically across the top of the parcel shelf. It doesn't interfere with any of the rear seat area and you can take passengers without any safety issues.
My car never had rear seats so was never a problem.

You're still putting a large lump of metal in the area someone's face might occupy in a crash. Not something I'd fancy sitting behind.

SmurfyBhoy 06 October 2016 09:33 AM


Originally Posted by neil-h (Post 11881947)
You're still putting a large lump of metal in the area someone's face might occupy in a crash. Not something I'd fancy sitting behind.

Surely not if it's bolted to c-pillar and above parcel shelf,

If ur face ends up in there during a crash id guess it's game over :(

neil-h 06 October 2016 10:04 AM


Originally Posted by SmurfyBhoy (Post 11881949)
Surely not if it's bolted to c-pillar and above parcel shelf,

If ur face ends up in there during a crash id guess it's game over :(

My bad, should've read that post properly :lol1: That being said I can't work out how you'd get one across the c pillar with out something being in the area a head could impact it.

stonejedi 06 October 2016 11:42 AM


Originally Posted by domino46 (Post 11881925)
Have any of your mates had major crashes while the harness bar has been fitted???

To answer your question YES,Otherwise i would not of mentioned it nothing major but enough to write the car off and had to get it rebuilt,He said to me that was the only thing that was still straight Lol.By the sounds of things you have had a bad experience with one fitted but not everyone has the same experience,to sum this up you won't fit one....but another guy will end of story.SJ.

Jay Cartay 06 October 2016 12:16 PM

Well what I have taken from this is that if I do run one, I will run a Hans device too. I bought a helmet with the capability just in case I decided to use one at some point. :thumb:

Frayz, never heard of Killer B. I'll get on Google and see what I can find. Any opinions on who does the best bar?

Jay Cartay 06 October 2016 12:20 PM

Wow. Killer B = $575 + $150 postage :eek:

neil-h 06 October 2016 12:44 PM


Originally Posted by Jay Cartay (Post 11882013)
Well what I have taken from this is that if I do run one, I will run a Hans device too. I bought a helmet with the capability just in case I decided to use one at some point. :thumb:

Frayz, never heard of Killer B. I'll get on Google and see what I can find. Any opinions on who does the best bar?

It makes a lot of sense, you can get an entry level HANS device for around £250. Which really isn't a lot in the grand scheme of things given what it costs to go racing.

If it were me I'd still rather use an inertia reel belt over a harness/harness bar set up but at least with a HANS device your limiting the risk of one of the more likely causes of injury in a crash (let's be honest, cars don't roll often).

domino46 06 October 2016 12:51 PM


Originally Posted by stonejedi (Post 11882007)
To answer your question YES,Otherwise i would not of mentioned it nothing major but enough to write the car off and had to get it rebuilt,He said to me that was the only thing that was still straight Lol.By the sounds of things you have had a bad experience with one fitted but not everyone has the same experience,to sum this up you won't fit one....but another guy will end of story.SJ.

Just asking the question as you said a few of your mates so I didn't assume they all had accidents or if they did your friends need to learn how to drive better :thumb: (joke intended)

My accident also led me to have a full Wrc cage fitted :norty::norty:

JGlanzaV 06 October 2016 01:41 PM


Originally Posted by Jay Cartay (Post 11882016)
Wow. Killer B = $575 + $150 postage :eek:

Its not cheap stuff, but you will struggfle to find better quality anywhere else....

The Pink Ninja 06 October 2016 02:42 PM

With a 4 point harness you still get the submarine effect with a harness bar like you do with a seatbelt, only with a 5 or 6 point you wont


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