Rear seats and roll bars

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  • 2manykids4a7
    Low Range
    • Nov 2008
    • 75

    Rear seats and roll bars

    I have just bought a Series III 109" and am looking to get it set up so I can fit the kids in the back (2 in boosters and 2 in car seats). From looking through the other threads I have drawn the following conclusions.

    1. Although roll overs are rare it is smarter to be safe than sorry so with kids back there a cage is a must.
    2. Forward facing seats are a better idea than the troop carrier option.

    That said, here are my questions.

    1. Am I right in my assumptions?
    2. If so, has anyone done something similar and if so what?
    3. Are there pre-fabricated cages out there or is it best to build your own?
    4. What seats fit back there?

    I'm sure there is more but for now that's all I can think of.

    Thanks for the help, Steve..
  • leafsprung
    Overdrive
    • Nov 2006
    • 1008

    #2
    If you are concerned about saftey, buy a volvo. 40 year old rovers arent safe cars and nothing you do to them will make them really safe in a serious accident. (no airbags, no crumple zones, no head support, no side impact protection, no saftey glass, no real saftey features of any kind) Having said that, build your own cage. Many seats will fit in the back cj, samurai, d90, bronco, yj, beard, mastercraft etc etc you can even narrow an existing seat like a vanagon and then have it recovered.

    Comment

    • graniterover
      1st Gear
      • Oct 2006
      • 167

      #3
      You don't mention if it's a SW or 3 door. Either way, 4 seats don't fit in a stock truck if you have a wife in the front. The easiest way would be to bolt in a cj rear seat in the way back for the kids in car seats. I'm not sure what I'd do for the boosters. With no neck support in the sw seats, boosters would not be a good idea.

      The inward facing seats are not an option with boosters or car seats.

      I'm not aware of anyone who sells an internal cage for a 109 so you're either building one or paying for someone to build one for you. Since you have 4 kids, I'm going to guess you're going to be paying someone for one soon.

      Comment

      • Leslie
        5th Gear
        • Oct 2006
        • 613

        #4
        A) I concur, do *not* use side-facing seats w/ kids, for their own safety....

        B) Safety Devices made/makes pre-fabbed roll cages, but, they're not so easy to obtain (Stable Energies might be able to get one for you), aren't cheap, and, really aren't designed for making use of the rear compartment w/ kids, it's more of a competition cage. Ike's right, something custom built might be a better route for you.

        C) Assuming a 5-door, you could, again as Ike mentioned, add a forward-facing CJ seat to the back cargo area, then have one or two of them there, and then the others in the back seat.

        D) What is the 109 used for? If it's a weekend-only, at low speeds in rural areas w/ low traffic, then I don't know that I'd bother w/ a cage. If you're using it daily, in city traffic, or worse, highway traffic, at speed...... I'd say, get an Outback or a Forester instead.....

        IMHO, FWIW...
        -L

        '72 SIII SW 88"
        '60 SII 88" RHD

        Comment

        • xsbowes
          2nd Gear
          • Dec 2006
          • 258

          #5
          If it is the same rover as in the "Show me your Series thread". I'd recommend the Mark I seats by Exmoor for your load area with a very well made roll cage.



          Our Passion for Land Rovers and our Dedication to Quality. Exmoor Trim manufactures and supplies a wide variety of products for the Land Rover range of vehicles. The Exmoor Trim brand has become known globally for quality and service.
          Stacy
          Motta S.A. Italy

          Comment

          • 2manykids4a7
            Low Range
            • Nov 2008
            • 75

            #6
            Thanks everyone,

            To answer as many of the questions as I can. It is the one in the show me your series section, it is a 3 door and has plenty of room back there for 2 rows of seats. It isn't a daily driver, will just be used for fun, trips to the beach, kids football (soccer) games etc. Unfortunately we live in a town that has the worst accident rate in the state and a traffic system that isn't particularly well planned, so I can't just take back roads to get anywhere.

            I really like the point about head and neck support for kids on boosters, I had thought about using bench seats out of a CJ but they don't come with headrests. I don't have any problems with making whatever I use permanent, so I don't need them to fold down or to the side, plus I don't care about ease of access the kids climb over everything anyway!

            So here's my initial plan. Find 2 bench seats (or 4 individuals, but this is less likely to fit) with headrests that fit back there (I don't care where they come from, new, pick and pull). Construct a cage and bracket system (either together or separately) that gives roll over protection, securely fastens the seats in the vehicle and provides mounting points for seatbelts.

            What do you guys think?
            I really liked the exmoor seats but don't need the folding capabilities etc. so wonder what else I could use?

            Steve..

            Edit: Bestop make a rear CJ seat with headrests for about $300, so I at least have one option there.

            Comment

            • 109 Pretender
              1st Gear
              • Oct 2008
              • 110

              #7
              Land Rover safety

              I think Leafsprung probably had best advice for you. Remember, the reason Land Rover Defenders aren't imported for sale by manufacturer is because the design doesn't lend itself to meeting the current safety regulations. While a cage would help in roll-over, the more likely accident would be a side impact or frontal/rear hit. Look at all the exposed metal in your series - and watch a consumer report video w/test dummy banging all over the inside of a NEW vehicle that meets safety regs. Think about how your kids would be thrown around - even w/seatbelts on there is a very close proximity for the head, neck, and shoulder regions to contact the body metal. I could never recommend child booster seats in a series rover - roll cage or not. Save the rover for grown up play time - get a modern safer vehicle to transport your most precious cargo.

              Comment

              • 109 Pretender
                1st Gear
                • Oct 2008
                • 110

                #8
                Another viewpoint on safety

                Here's something I ran across on the web that basically says maybe we are wrong in assuming Rovers are not safe???


                Road accident statistics on a model-by-model basis from the UK Department of Transport show that the Land Rover Defender and Land Rover Discovery are the safest cars on British roads (measured in terms of chance of death in two car injury accidents) - between three times safer than the safest Volvo models, twice as safe (half the death-rate per two vehicles injury accident) compared with the Jeep Cherokee and Toyota Land Cruiser and only matched by the Mercedes-Benz S-Class and Jaguar XJ.

                I think it's because they are driven so sloooow....

                Cheers!

                Comment

                • 2manykids4a7
                  Low Range
                  • Nov 2008
                  • 75

                  #9
                  Hmmm, interesting.

                  Obviously I care about my kids and in some ways if I even press on with the idea I look like an a$$. That said I have had my kids in the back of a CJ off and on for 6 years so I'm already that guy. Thankfully everything has been fine and I do drive slowly (not really many other options!!) and as defensively as possible.

                  What I appreciate about forums like these is the variety of opinions and extra thoughts that you get. Up until now my kids have always been in seats with built in headrests, if it hadn't been for the above comments it wouldn't have crossed my mind to make headrests a must on any bench seats.

                  Clearly there are no guarantees and there is always more you can do, but if I do go forward with this the more ideas and help I can get beforehand the better.

                  Thanks, Steve..

                  Comment

                  • leafsprung
                    Overdrive
                    • Nov 2006
                    • 1008

                    #10
                    show that the Land Rover Defender and Land Rover Discovery are the safest cars on British roads

                    That study is pretty worthless. Leaves out single vehicle accidents and incredibly it also leaves out passenger fatalities/injuries!!! Why would someone leave out that data unless they were trying to skew the results?

                    """It is important to note that these statistics relate to DRIVER deaths or injuries, not to passenger or pedestrian deaths or injuries.""""

                    Comment

                    • SafeAirOne
                      Overdrive
                      • Apr 2008
                      • 3435

                      #11
                      Originally posted by leafsprung
                      That study is pretty worthless.
                      To add to that, I see that the source of the data is Wikipedia. Don't believe everything you read on wikipedia--It is fairly well known that anyone can modify the info on the site, and companies often go in and change or add information to show their product in a favorable light.
                      --Mark

                      1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel

                      0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
                      (9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).

                      Comment

                      • 2manykids4a7
                        Low Range
                        • Nov 2008
                        • 75

                        #12
                        I'm not trying to purely justify my idea, but if you follow the link it is to the department of transport, and although it is only driver related there may be a correlation to passengers as well.

                        That said, I'd still like to hear of any other things people think I need to be considering.

                        Comment

                        • Leslie
                          5th Gear
                          • Oct 2006
                          • 613

                          #13
                          Uh......

                          Okay, lemme point out.... there's a *BIG* difference between a Series and a Disco.....

                          Go over to Dweb and check out all of the accidents that could have easily been fatalities, that instead, people walked away from, because of how a Disco is built.

                          A Series isn't padded, doesn't have bucket seats, door braces, a steel cage-structure like a Series (Disco roofs are steel, w/ the pillars), etc.

                          A Defender does step up from the Series w/ safety features, but, I'd still rather put the family in a Disco instead of the Series on a regular basis, if as a daily driver.

                          With that said, have to admit, the kids love the Series, they argue over who's turn it is to go ride with me (only a two-seater at the moment)... I wouldn't do it regularly, long highway trips, etc., but, a weekend run-around the neighborhood, up a light trail, round town, it's a lot of fun....
                          -L

                          '72 SIII SW 88"
                          '60 SII 88" RHD

                          Comment

                          • Mountain132
                            Low Range
                            • Apr 2008
                            • 79

                            #14
                            I put a Cj seat from quadratec in the back of my '70 88 which also folds forward for space. I use a rear facing car seat and the baby loves it. Puts him to sleep in seconds. We only use it to the park and about 5mi from the house, no high speeds. quadratec also has bench seats with head rests. Make sure to get seatbelts.

                            Comment

                            • JRover
                              Low Range
                              • Jul 2008
                              • 3

                              #15
                              Actually children surviving car accidents is much less dependent on the vehicle and much more dependent on the type of carseat used and whether it is properly installed.

                              If a proper roll bar is built with supports going to the frame and properly fabricating securing points for a seat with a 3 point attachment system and 5 point harness, it should be fine in all but the worst crashes. There are several child seats that would do this and offer side impact protection. Britax is one, there are others. Oh and would also add Ike's sliders for additional side protection. Thats what i told my wife they are for.

                              Comment

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