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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Donut Shop
Is a track-prepped car PC for being pulled over?
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<blockquote data-quote="xblitzkriegx" data-source="post: 16421080" data-attributes="member: 105608"><p>Depending on your state, the laws will probably say something about three point belts or stock restraints. </p><p></p><p>Regardless of moral or common sense choice, you'd need to reinstall the stock belts and be able to click them closed in order to remain legal. I did this a long time ago on a caged car I had. It wasn't pretty but I could route it through the seat and click it closed if I really needed to though. </p><p></p><p>I did make sure the cage was as far away from my head as humanly possible and I mounted the seat very low, plus I always made sure to harness myself in the car tightly at all times. IIRC, there was around 8" clearance between my head and the nearest bar. Not wearing a helmet still made it a liability on the street but I was younger and dumber then.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="xblitzkriegx, post: 16421080, member: 105608"] Depending on your state, the laws will probably say something about three point belts or stock restraints. Regardless of moral or common sense choice, you'd need to reinstall the stock belts and be able to click them closed in order to remain legal. I did this a long time ago on a caged car I had. It wasn't pretty but I could route it through the seat and click it closed if I really needed to though. I did make sure the cage was as far away from my head as humanly possible and I mounted the seat very low, plus I always made sure to harness myself in the car tightly at all times. IIRC, there was around 8" clearance between my head and the nearest bar. Not wearing a helmet still made it a liability on the street but I was younger and dumber then. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Donut Shop
Is a track-prepped car PC for being pulled over?
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