Re: Tom Jennings, Re-webbed seat belts
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: Tom Jennings, Re-webbed seat belts



My local upholstery place did it. I stuck with black, and I wasn't looking for Correct. There's a herringbone-ish pattern to it, and to be honest I never even compared. The width was the same though.

From an upholstery point of view, it's a pretty trivial job.

Was lucky, the retractor end was fine, since it's generally inside the housing and not sun-ruined. There was minimal wear on those, so I left them as-is. The two belts match pretty damn close.



On Nov 8, 2005, at 5:08 PM, neprocap@xxxxxxx wrote:

Tom, Where did you have your belts re-webbed? I was thinking about having them done for one of my SC/360 Hornet's. Was it done in original style webbing? I am working on restoring my 2 bbl SC/360 and I haven't been able to find any original red seat belts so I've decided to go the re-webbing route. Thanx.....Joe

PS please post to the List because my email is not right. I've tried changing it and even had Frank involved but it just won't change to my new email address.

On November 8, 2005 Tom Jennings wrote:

I had all the nylon replaced on my belts, and also put 1970 outside
metal ends on 1973 retractors, total cost: $50. Consider that as an
option if you find a set you like but the webbing is worn, or you
want different buckle ends.



On Nov 6, 2005, at 5:41 PM, farna@xxxxxxx wrote:

Armand, I have retractable three point shoulder belts in tha back
of my Rambler wagon. The trick is to find a set in a late model
sedan that you can make fit. In your case it sholdn't be to hard --
I had to find something that had the retractors enclosed because
they are exposed in the wagon. I mounted them directly on top of
the wheel wells, drilled through and used an anchor plate in the
wheel well under the nuts. They would mount the same in a Javelin,
but you would have to cut a notch in the forward edge of the
package tray so the bel will go over the seat. You can't cut a slot
as the belt is one piece. The seat back has to come out and be
installed after the belts are put in. It's not too difficult to do.
You may find a late sedan that has exposed retractors, but I doubt
it. I used Nissan rear belts. The covered retractors weren't made
ot be exposed, just covered for dust protection. They are hardly
noticeable in the back of the wagon though -- no one has ever
commented!
  on them.


From: "Armand Eshleman" <aje1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <mail@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: RE: Seat Belts Date: Sun, 6 Nov 2005 10:14:31 -0600

I really love old cars too!!! But I don't love old car seat belts.
I saw a
picture of an AMX backseat somewhere that
had retractable shoulder harness installed, I  assume it has the
retractable
lap belt too, and I always hoped to figure out how the owner did
it. So far
no luck. Actually I'm about ready to give up on the whole thing and
go to a
set of after market seats that I can use four to six point belts
with just
because I always felt so comfprtable in my Formula Ford with a six
point
harness on. What the heck I can't reach the stereo controls
anyway!!!!!!


-- Frank Swygert Publisher, "American Independent Magazine" (AIM) For all AMC enthusiasts http://farna.home.att.net/AIM.html (free download available!)






=============================================================
Posted by wixList Archiver -- http://www.amxfiles.com/wixlist













Home Back to the Home of the AMC Gremlin 


This site contains affiliate links for which we may be compensated