Three-point safety belts - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Three-point safety belts Printer Friendly
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seat belt
(redirected from Three-point safety belts)

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seat belt

Safety device in a motor vehicle or aeroplane that is designed to reduce the risk of injury to a passenger from sudden changes in velocity, such as during a collision or when brakes are applied sharply. In an emergency, it extends the time over which the decelerating force acts on a passenger thereby reducing that force to a safe level. It also spreads the force over a broad band across the chest and over the hip bone, reducing the pressure applied to the person.



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Every seat has handrails as well as three-point safety belts integrated with the seat.
Summary: The world's first Volvo car with standard-fit three-point safety belts was delivered to the Volvo dealer in Sweden on August 13 1959 Feed out, stretch, click and pull taut.
There are four airbags, crash sensors, three-point safety belts with pretensioners and an improved active single-piece roll-over bar situated behind the rear seats that will extend within 150 milliseconds should the car register it is about to turn over.
 
 
 
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