Rear facing seats
advice please, cant find what the law is on rear facing seats having to use seat belts. if a passenger turns the captains chair round during travel,( to put feet up due to athritis) is this legal. thank you in advance
Comments
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I would think it would be illegal to do that under the construction and use regulations that the vehicle is manufactured under. The cab seat when turned does not lock in place in my Ducato so it would not be a very safe thing to do in my opinion in any case. Seat
belt legislation only relates to forward facing seats. Regards, Roy0 -
again, agree with Roy....dont do it...
our captains chairs have the belts as an integral part of the construction, so if facing rearwards, you could still fix the belt in place.....however, they dont lock in the reversed position as they do when facing forward.
by all means, slide the seat right back and use a small box (or similar) to raise aching legs, but face forwards.....
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In a previous life I owned a Kia Sedona which had seats in the second row that turned and
locked facing rearwards. When in this position the legal side provided a lap belt which was deemed sufficient to comply with the seatbelt law.My second point is that if the passenger turned the nearside seat to face rearwards! Would this not severely restrict the drivers ability to see to the nearside of the vehicle and may even block the viewing of the nearside mirror. To that end I think it
should be a 'No' from me...0 -
Just don't do it in a Toyota Yaris. You end up having all your clobber thrown on to the front lawn.
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You could always do as some passengers in vans do and rest you feet/legs on the dashboard
That's what I do sometimes and I've seen plenty of other MH passengers doing that as well.
Agree with others and would strongly advise against travelling "backwards". Must admit, thinking about it, I don't think I'd find it comfortable travelling that way. What about using one of those small fold-up plastic stools in front of the passenger seat,
to put feet on?0 -
The other thing to consider here is the air bag, if fitted. In an accident they only give protection when the seat and its occupant are in the normal position. Any other position could result in serious injury. Can you imagine what it would do to someone
who has their legs on the dashboard.0 -
There are laws and there is common sense. Your proposal is contrary to both. Manufacturers of all vehicles design in a range of passive and active safety measures for all vehicles including so pyrotechnic ones such as airbags and seatbelt pretensioners.
It just isn't sensible to subvert these protections but turning the seat round in travel
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In a previous life I owned a Kia Sedona which had seats in the second row that turned and
locked facing rearwards. When in this position the legal side provided a lap belt which was deemed sufficient to comply with the seatbelt law.My second point is that if the passenger turned the nearside seat to face rearwards! Would this not severely restrict the drivers ability to see to the nearside of the vehicle and may even block the viewing of the nearside mirror. To that end I think it
should be a 'No' from me...Write your comments here...if driving on the Continent, it would also seriously FREAK OUT other drivers coming towards you !
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