Harness installs - New Clio RS16

Harness installs - New Clio RS16

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Discussion

theboyfold

Original Poster:

11,010 posts

232 months

Monday 11th July 2016
quotequote all
I thought I'd put this question here, as I guess this is where most of the knowledge will reside. The new Clio RS16 has a harness in, and it doesn't have a harness bar:



I thought it was quite dangerous for a harness to be bolted to the floor like that with a steep angle from mounting to shoulder. Or, am I wrong and the engineers at Renault right? I'm a little confused.

E-bmw

9,870 posts

158 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
Primarily it is down to the harness manufacturer who decides how they can/can't be fitted.

Personally, I have never understood why it has been said by many about the angle of the rear section being close to horizontal.

IMHO if the harness is doing it's job (and tightened correctly) you won't move when inverted, so I can't see how the angle of the back section could cause spinal compression, quite the opposite, as the lesser angle will allow more give & may result in head/roof contact if EVEN slightly slack.

But that is just my opinion, I am no expert.

Steve H

5,677 posts

201 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
And then there's the question of whether you want harnesses in a car that isn't caged.........

Chr1sch

2,585 posts

199 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
Steve H said:
And then there's the question of whether you want harnesses in a car that isn't caged.........
Indeed..I have a set to go in my car but I'm guessing that a new Clio has a stronger roof than my 20 year old 306...

E-bmw

9,870 posts

158 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
Steve H said:
And then there's the question of whether you want harnesses in a car that isn't caged.........
Good point.

Rick101

6,989 posts

156 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
I've seen that photo before and was quite surprised. I certainly wouldn't have them fitted like that.

Had the usual people come out with how do I know better than the manufacturers who spend millions yada yada.

Entirely up to the user and their risk level.

theboyfold

Original Poster:

11,010 posts

232 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
Steve H said:
And then there's the question of whether you want harnesses in a car that isn't caged.........
What's the advantage / requirement to have a cage? (Serious question as I'm curious to understand why this is the case)

E-bmw

9,870 posts

158 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
If you have a harness but no cage & rollover you can't move out of the way of the roof.

If you have a cage & no harness you could hit your head on the cage.

You REALLY need both together or not at all.

theboyfold

Original Poster:

11,010 posts

232 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
E-bmw said:
If you have a harness but no cage & rollover you can't move out of the way of the roof.

If you have a cage & no harness you could hit your head on the cage.

You REALLY need both together or not at all.
Cheers, makes sense really

daniel-5zjw7

622 posts

107 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
It's definitely an interesting one especially given as this is from a manufacturer.. I also have always been of the understanding that harnesses installed like that could possibly pull down on your shoulders during an accident and that harnesses/buckets are not suitable without a rollcage.

But no doubt Renault must have had to do some R&D on this to get this set up in to production?


88racing

1,748 posts

162 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
Its not uncommon to see race cars with their harnesses fitted like that - even when they do have a roll cage. However, since the wearing of a HANS device became compulsory in circuit racing this season, its now recommended though to have them anchored between horizontal and no more than 20 degrees below horizontal. See this MSA document:

https://www.msauk.org/assets/fhrguidance.pdf

Fonzey

2,166 posts

133 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
E-bmw said:
If you have a harness but no cage & rollover you can't move out of the way of the roof.

If you have a cage & no harness you could hit your head on the cage.

You REALLY need both together or not at all.
I'd make an argument for a Helmet and HANS too if adding the cage/harness combo. After all that, particularly on a road car it makes you wonder if 3 point belts are all that bad? biggrin

Ian_sUK

733 posts

186 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
I ran harnesses in a Clio exactly like that. I read all the info but decided I was OK with the (apparent) risk.

df76

3,778 posts

284 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
Fonzey said:
E-bmw said:
If you have a harness but no cage & rollover you can't move out of the way of the roof.

If you have a cage & no harness you could hit your head on the cage.

You REALLY need both together or not at all.
I'd make an argument for a Helmet and HANS too if adding the cage/harness combo. After all that, particularly on a road car it makes you wonder if 3 point belts are all that bad? biggrin
Completely agree. Either go the whole way, or leave all of the standard passive safety gear in place (and get a CG lock for the seat belt).

GC8

19,910 posts

196 months

Thursday 14th July 2016
quotequote all
This a topic on which everyone is an 'expert'.

My constructive comment follows: cross the webbing straps over - this will making stretching less of an issue.

EvoIV NL

173 posts

165 months

Friday 15th July 2016
quotequote all
GC8 said:
This a topic on which everyone is an 'expert'.

My constructive comment follows: cross the webbing straps over - this will making stretching less of an issue.
Isnt crossing the straps a solution if your fixing points are too far part which would have the potential of the straps coming off your shoulders when tension is applied ? So rather its a solution to fixing/anchor points not stretching.

But agreed, in the picture above I would also be looking to cross the straps.

nickfrog

21,771 posts

223 months

Friday 15th July 2016
quotequote all
The RS16 is not a production car so difficult to tell if it would be like that if/when it made production although the Trophy-R had that angle, with a cage though.

Apparently, in case of crash the forces throw you forward and if the straps hold you back, there is an opposing force in the opposite direction of the strap... The greater the angle, the more that force is pushing down on your shoulders rather than pinning you back.

I have a harnesses in my Megane at 40deg or so and non-fixed buckets - I spoke to Recaro and they commented on the angle being "acceptable" at up to 45deg (and that the Sportser CS are designed for a harness). This is for track use only, and while far from optimised without a cage, I am reasonably happy with the risk.