Well this should please Mr. Hammerhead as clearly I am confoming to his "argumentitive" desctription of me.
One of my fails was that the mounting point of the harness is too low.
I looked in the SVA manual and did some measurements using a block of very similar shape and placed on the seat as described in annex 4 to find the
seat belt mounting is about 500 mm.
From the manual:
mounting
annex4
Unlesss I am reading the wrong part or misunderstanding it, my inital rough measurements show are that I am well within the specified criteria.
I am using the horizontal plane of the traingular piece through which the seat belt runs as the mounting point.
So what do I do?
Should I write to the SVA place explaining this and get conformation that I have measured correctly so that I can show their response at the
restest?
Basically I don't want to be wasting my time fixzing stuff that is not wrong nor be in a position at the restest where I have misunderesttod the
manual thus not rectified the problem.
[Edited on 7/9/06 by 02GF74]
Do you have any pics of the top mounts, seat and the way you are measuring.
Steve
I'd phone the tester and query it politely as a first step. He will be able to explain his thinking behind failing it.
If he can't answer based on facts in the manual then you can start the official compaints process using his comments against him if
appropriate.
But like many of these things it often ends up being cheaper and quicker to bite your tongue 'fix' the problem with the spacers he suggested
and remove them later.
If you win on that point using 'agressive arguing' you can guarantee there will be two testers at your retest picking holes in everything
to the letter, including stuff they'd previously checked. Many of which they would have ignored otherwise.
At least that's my experience of the way human nature often works.
quote:
Originally posted by Howlor
Do you have any pics of the top mounts, seat and the way you are measuring.
Steve
I'm using Cobra seats and mine measures about 480 on the 'height of effective anchorage above reference point'.
I measured in a similar way to you using a block and two long rulers.
I was assuming mine would be OK.
If I were you I would want a clear explanation of why you failed.
Try asking the SVA guy how high the spacers he suggested have to be and if he quotes the above rule then politley suggest that you already exceed the
requirement.
Stu
quote:
Originally posted by iank
I'd phone the tester and query it politely as a first step. He will be able to explain his thinking behind failing it.
If he can't answer based on facts in the manual then you can start the official compaints process using his comments against him if appropriate.
But like many of these things it often ends up being cheaper and quicker to bite your tongue 'fix' the problem with the spacers he suggested and remove them later.
If you win on that point using 'agressive arguing' you can guarantee there will be two testers at your retest picking holes in everything to the letter, including stuff they'd previously checked. Many of which they would have ignored otherwise.
At least that's my experience of the way human nature often works.
quote:
Originally posted by whitestu
Try asking the SVA guy .....
If you're sure they've made a mistake why not call them and say you took your car to a kit car company for them to carry out the works req'd to pass and they say you are already within the correct limits for the seat belts will they double check... Then you don't look like a smart arse.
"Well this should please Mr. Hammerhead as clearly I am confoming to his "argumentitive" desctription of me."
GET OVER IT!
Plenty of posts on here from people who have phoned the tester/local SVA center to ask questions, some even on first name terms. Sorry to hear LB
aren't playing the game.
As for 're-testing' a second tester could 'point out something of concern' and as you say proving it hadn't been changed is
difficult. The wording gives them plenty of discression if they want to get all jobsworth.
p.s. Sorry if I sounded like I thought you wanted to start a war, to be honest I think you have good grounds for a challenge if you want to go that
way, seen too many people spend more time and energy winning on a point of principle than it's really worth though.
Don't they have some kind of jig for testing? Sounds to me like he dropped the tape measure down to the highest point on the squab, rather than
the 'official' diagram.
Having never been to SVA before, would I be right in assuming that any fails can be explained by the tester so you know what to do for re-test? Surely it would be easiest to find out what the tester will accept as a fix.
quote:
Originally posted by Hammerhead
"Well this should please Mr. Hammerhead as clearly I am confoming to his "argumentitive" desctription of me."
GET OVER IT!
quote:
Originally posted by iank
Don't they have some kind of jig for testing? Sounds to me like he dropped the tape measure down to the highest point on the squab, rather than the 'official' diagram.
Good luck!
I think I'll raise mine a bit with some washers prior to the test to make it a bit less marginal
Can you remove the bottom of the seat and put a bit of padding on the floor
I plan to do that for 100% clearance pass.....
Personally, I'd leave it be (if you're sure it's OK) and go for the SVA re-test armed with the manual. He may have made a genuine
mistake when he failed it the first time. If he fails it on the re-test, get the manual out and go through the method with him.
There's no point disputing or even discussing it with the tester IMO. I doubt he'd change his mind and even if he did, you've still got
to go for a re-test on the other stuff.
Phil
[Edited on 7-9-06 by Hellfire]
I agree with Hellfire, these guys do make mistakes and are human, no reason why you can't have a discussion about why it has failed if it fails
again at re-test.
Might be alot easier though to just chuck in a couple of small spacers for the retest, should take all of 5 mins and then no problems.
Rich.
quote:
Originally posted by johnemms
Can you remove the bottom of the seat and put a bit of padding on the floor
I plan to do that for 100% clearance pass.....
My car was tested with fibreglass seats and no cushions. Is it an option to borrow some seats for the retest?
With seats with harness holes you also have to be very careful that the harnesses dont push down on the bottom of the seat in a crash situation
otherwise they are deemed to be structural and have to have approvals etc.
Sounds to me the easiest way is to modify the mounts to what he suggested. 2 reasons for this;
1. cos this is what he suggested and therefore should pass (is it hard to do?),
2. It proves you arent really argumentative, just enthusiastic and he might then not go into more detail about other points.
Bear in mind he is well within his rights to put the car thro a full retest rather than just the fail points so keep on the right side of him. My
tester was extremely strict but at least he did spend time to discuss possible fixes. I talked to him in the manner to which he had become acostomed
to and this worked for me. All discussions were purely technical / factual and the retest was a breeze. At the end of the day they want you to drive a
car that is safe and enjoy it for many years to come. Believe it or not they want to pass you, it is better for them to fill their diary up with full
paying first time tests than £30 retests.
If he has already labelled you as argumentative then id just roll over and do what he says otherwise he can cause you further pain whilst keeping well
within the guidelines (and cost you another £30 plus time off work and stress etc).
Rear harness mounts are easy to get hold of - you might just need to weld in some longer threaded tubes to get the height right once and for all as
per his recommendations.
I cant help thinking that the section of the book you refer to might need to be read in conjunction with another part, ie possibly ref structural
integrity of seats and type approval. My tester spent a lot of time in this area due to using fibreglass seats. He also then checked steering wheel
heights etc.