I bought a CG-Lock, but couldn't get it to stay on the seat belt buckle. I could not find a tech line phone number. I went to the pointy board for help since that is where I first heard of it. Took a search to find the old post, but . . . oh, wait, I'm onething not Kestrel so . . .
Long story short, Gary S gave me:
" [email protected] (he's the CGLock guy). "
I emailed Bruce last night and had the following reply when I checked my mail this morning!
Hi, Hal!
You wrote: “Based on the following post and reply on Miata.net Forum . . . can you help me?”
Yup!
We were surprised by the Miata’s VERY hard, slick plastic on the seat belt tongue. But we did find a good solution and we will send you a hand-made one today. We hope to get them into production shortly.
Thanks for writing and your interest in the CG-Lock!
Please thank “Gary S” for giving you our contact information!
Happy driving,
Bruce
www.CG-Lock.com The CG-Lock is NOT a safety device
Business e-mail: [email protected]
Phone: 302-234-8110
Fax: 302-234-7590
Fed Ex and Mail Address: Lap Belt Cinch, Inc.
50 Slashpine Circle
Hockessin, DE 19707-1027
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~
I like the way the CG-Lock works and can see using it even while I'm going down the road. My old company truck seats sloped down toward the front and I was always pushing myself back into the seat. The CG-Lock would have solved that.
Last weekend at the TT, I used the twist-the-belt method, but then I realized a very big problem nobody ever mentions. An improperly positioned 2 inch lap belt can cause serious pain in a crash. Twisting the belt takes it from 2 inches down to about 1/2 inch. SLIDE RULE GUYS help me, but I think that quadruples the lbs/sq in. :shock: on my pelvis, bladder, and guts :puker:
Since I'm not ready to punch holes in the tranny tunnel, the CG-Lock is the answer! I'm in no way affiliated with CG-Lock or any of their subsidiaries :wink: