wvonkessler Wilson von Kessler Mod Moderator Location: Lookout Mountain, GA Join Date: 02/28/2006 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 1,127 Rally Car: Colts are in Finland; now '87 325i, '89 325i |
Because at the time the rule was adopted - which was when NRS published its first ruleset, there was no requirement in rally for certification of seats - simply a requirement by the SCCA that seats be fixed back, which could let folks use all sorts of abominations in their cars, including such fine products as these: (Don't laugh, I saw them used in more than one rally car) The FIA provided a true certification based upon testing for minimum threshold of safety, was widely used within the racing seat industry, and especially so in the rally realm. "Talk about drugs. Driving a car like that, going that fast, it’s like all the drugs at once." - Tommy Byrne "Now, Pinky, if by any chance you are captured during this mission, remember you are Gunther Heindriksen from Appenzell. You moved to Grindelwald to drive the cog train to Murren. Can you repeat that?" - The Brain Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 10/09/2014 03:33PM by wvonkessler. |
tdrrally edward mucklow Senior Moderator Location: charleston,wv Join Date: 05/31/2011 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 763 Rally Car: ford mustang LX 5.0, 1973 VW Beetle |
would it be possible to get a waiver for an other seat? from other sanctioning bodies like score or the like I would rather drive a slow car fast as a fast car slow! first rule of cars: get what makes you happy, your the one paying for it! |
heymagic Banned Godlike Moderator Location: La la land Join Date: 01/25/2006 Age: Fossilized Posts: 3,740 Rally Car: Not a Volvo |
NASA only requires FIA seats for NRS logged cars, not for RA logged cars.
I'm sure there are great seats that aren't FIA approved but I would be careful on what I bought. Fleabay clones maybe not so much. Something used in SCORE or similar heck ya. I will still personally look at winged seats. Depends on the seats. I sat in some that the wings were low enough to press my shoulders. I'm not tall but pretty stocky. Skinny butt and big shoulders and chest. Seats (and helmets) are so iffy on the fit..and the fit is critical really to both comfort and safety. After my above mentioned Datsun roll a couple friends went together at Xmas and bought me a Kevlar based Simpson (maybe Bell ..been a few decades) helmet. OMG was that thing light compared to the normal old Bell I had. Quality helmets are really a consideration in my book. Irregardless of one's personal opinion on the winged/non-winged seat I'll put forth a couple things to think about. We race fairly small cars, during a roll or side impact you will very likely hit the cage, window, B pillar and or your partners helmet. The farther your head travels before impact the greater the impact and more cranial damage as well as neck muscle, tendon and vertebrae damage. Distance usually increases speed and force, think shove versus punch. Maybe the ping pong thing can be reduced with tighter wings, maybe it is a bigger risk..I doubt the latter but I don't know. All of this safety stuff gets weighed ..risk against cost against effectiveness. Rally forever has tended to set a minimum standard and some people still fuss. Just like the padding thing, or misplaced header bars or 1/2 laterals that are too far inward. We continually gain insight into the actual damage done to brains by impacts. Damage may take years to show up..look at Ali for a great example. Brilliant mind, amazing athlete and a horrible demise to Parkinsons. It's your head and sooner or later it will get bumped. I don't have a good answer on what you should do effectively protect it, but do the best you can and hope like hell it works. |
john vanlandingham John Vanlandingham Godlike Moderator Location: Ford Asylum, Sleezattle, WA Join Date: 12/20/2005 Age: Fossilized Posts: 14,152 Rally Car: Saab 96 V4 |
Gene---nobody thinks in terms of years. It was 30-35 years and a decrease in pysical condition before the years of lawn darting my head into the ground showed serious effects...hints for 15 before but dismissed as overwork..
Can't get people to think, much less think ahead. John Vanlandingham Sleezattle, WA, USA Vive le Prole-le-ralliat www.rallyrace.net/jvab CALL +1 206 431-9696 Remember! Pacific Standard Time is 3 hours behind Eastern Standard Time. |
heymagic Banned Godlike Moderator Location: La la land Join Date: 01/25/2006 Age: Fossilized Posts: 3,740 Rally Car: Not a Volvo |
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john vanlandingham John Vanlandingham Godlike Moderator Location: Ford Asylum, Sleezattle, WA Join Date: 12/20/2005 Age: Fossilized Posts: 14,152 Rally Car: Saab 96 V4 |
Both sides of the fambly, and early for them..me, since there were so many broken bones, ripped ligaments, torn cartilages all over the place BUT I was in significantly better shape than average---and the whole nature of my existence--AND the character trait i admired most was endurance---I never noticed the rheumatoid stuff....till after some of the spine shit was rebuilt and that pain disappeared---then I noticed... right should, right hip, wrist on right (previously broke both bones at the wrist.... Every day wifey is off we go for long walks at good pace.. usually around 1h 45m or more..., feel much better after... John Vanlandingham Sleezattle, WA, USA Vive le Prole-le-ralliat www.rallyrace.net/jvab CALL +1 206 431-9696 Remember! Pacific Standard Time is 3 hours behind Eastern Standard Time. |
Doivi Clarkinen Banned Elite Moderator Location: the end of the universe Join Date: 02/12/2006 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 1,432 Rally Car: 1980 Opel Ascona B |
I'm 6'5" and most winged seats don't work for me. My shoulders get stuck between the wings and it's kind of hard to steer. The only winged seat that I've sat in that actually fit was an XL Racetech but that was pretty expensive and at the time the XL version wasn't FIA certified. Maybe it has been since then, I dunno.
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tdrrally edward mucklow Senior Moderator Location: charleston,wv Join Date: 05/31/2011 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 763 Rally Car: ford mustang LX 5.0, 1973 VW Beetle |
last time i spoke tho master craft they told me the seat was fia approvable but they did not want to pay the fia. i don't blame them for that at I would rather drive a slow car fast as a fast car slow! first rule of cars: get what makes you happy, your the one paying for it! |
X Monâ„¢ Matt Rhoads Ultra Moderator Location: Oxford, Penna. Join Date: 05/02/2012 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 32 Rally Car: The silly seat |
About the ping pong...
Being one of the foolish folks who prefers to sit on the correct side of the car, I've had an opportunity to sit in a bunch of the differnet seats out there. Of all of those, the only wing seats that seem to fit well are the RaceTech XLs, the original OMP HTE 400, and the Momo XLs. I'm 5'11, but blame my birthing hips for lack of fitmet into the I've not sat in the OMPs at speed, but have in the RaceTechs and Momos. At Black River this year, I ran a the Momo for the first time in our GC Subaru, and had a moment of ping-pong as well due to the undulation of the road [read L5/kick R6/kick L5-/jump]. While I don't specifically remember the level of padding on the RaceTech, having run RWV and Sandblast with them, I don't remember the ping-pong being an issue. At ESPR, the same Momo was in an E46 M3, where we saw no issues throughout both days. For the Momo, there's somewhere between an inch and an inch and a half to each side of my XL Peltor G78, so we're not talking a ton of range of motion nor time to build up the p. That said, the event was signifigant enough to make me take metal pause as my head prepared to play pumpkin chunkin, and then realize that perhaps I should keep reading the story book I had in my lap. Sans more padding [moar is more betterer, right?] to change the Youngs Modulus of the side of the seat, and thereby reduce the ping-pong, I don't know what I'd change. However, I'm not so sure the ping-pong is a function of hitting one side and rebounding, so much as the car itself seeing high +/- roll rates through the event. I suppose more stage mileage will tell, but first we need to put a motor back together after playing melt the piston. |
stgallagher Sean Gallagher Mod Moderator Location: Santa Ana, CA. Join Date: 06/16/2011 Age: Ancient Posts: 70 Rally Car: Ford Raptor |
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heymagic Banned Godlike Moderator Location: La la land Join Date: 01/25/2006 Age: Fossilized Posts: 3,740 Rally Car: Not a Volvo |
In addition to the different heights issue I wonder if the spacing on the wings needs looked at. Maybe just adding wings isn't the total answer. I've noticed in the past some WRC cars with a very wide spaced helmet wing. I would guess big budget pro teams like that would tend to get a more effective item. I've noticed padding or foam added to some of those seats right to the Bpillar or window, must be to start deceleration sooner. The wings spread out would be possibly less likely to ping pong and there as a last resort item. Maybe the inside wings could be offset more to hinder ping ponging. That would make a left and right seat so manufactures would need more inventory and they hate that.
I don't think wings should come into play on a rally road, they should just be there. Maybe you hit one once in a while but no ping pong while still rallying, only when the shit hits the fan. I can see it being a bit different in the desert stuff as their range of motion is a bit (well lot) more. We need to be able to see out of the damned cars in traffic and since a rally is 1/2 to 2/3 transits that has to be considered. We don't have spotters and aren't all going the same way. Tight wings would likely be a wrong answer then. Cars with the main hoop to 1/2 lateral bar could have that area modified to be a wing of sorts. A bit of sheet steel or carbon fiber and some of that good sheet foam padding. The inside area could be dealt with by those nets and offsetting the seats from each other. One issue I've noticed with some combinations is you can't hardly get in or out of the cars. Between the wings, 1/2lat support, A pillar support, door bar and steering wheel it gets stoopid tight sometimes. The Sube wagon that Eric Lyden built was one of those. I don't know how he got in or out. Must be a tall skinny thing because I could barely make it work without a helmet on. |
imnotcrazy Don Kennedy Super Moderator Location: Reading, PA Join Date: 10/05/2006 Age: Fossilized Posts: 227 Rally Car: Impreza |
How does the CARS 10 years apply (Yea, I could dig in the rule book, but its a simple question easily answered here by those in the know)? Only to CARS log booked cars or to any car running one of their events? Don Kennedy |
tdrrally edward mucklow Senior Moderator Location: charleston,wv Join Date: 05/31/2011 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 763 Rally Car: ford mustang LX 5.0, 1973 VW Beetle |
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Morison Banned Super Moderator Location: Calgary, AB Join Date: 03/27/2009 Age: Ancient Posts: 1,798 Rally Car: (ex)86 RX-7(built), (ex)2.5RS (bought) |
At present, CARS measures competitor and vehicle safety gear based on the license being used by the driver. (Canadian residents MUST run on a CARS license) So, if you have a RA license and are running on a 'permit to compete' in Canada, your NASA logbooked car, and your personal safety gear, would have to meet RA standards. First Rally: 2001 Driver (7), Co-Driver (44) Drivers (16) Clerk (10), Official (7), Volunteer (4) Cars Built (1), Engines Built (0) Cages Built (0) Last Updated, January 4, 2015
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MattP Matt Pullen Senior Moderator Location: Calgary Join Date: 10/22/2013 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 282 Rally Car: 2002 Ford StRanger |
Stu didn't have winged seats in the Subaru ,when I recovered it I took a look at his helmet there were at least 2 big strikes from the cage to it. Even if you have winged seats if the belts aren't properly fitted and damn tight you will still bounce around like a demented hula girl.
Yes, it's a Ranger. Xr4Ti, it is rwd and was made in Germany. |