Only my second (actually I just noticed that it's my third!! Whoopee!) post but I lurk on here and learn something new every day. Lots of great info.
Anyhoo, I have a '62 4door 948, fitted with inertia reel front seat belts . The Black Blowfly is in basically good nick, and with only a couple of other tiny mods like a screw on oil filter. Otherwise still original and that's what I want to keep..
I've read all that I could find in here about the problems of the upper seat belt anchor point position on the B post, and mine are fitted so low that the belt slides off my shoulder, and presumably wouldn't do much good keeping my chest/face off the steering wheel in a head-on collision. I don't have trafficators or an exterior slot for them, so fitting a long plate all the way down inside the B post to reinforce it would involve cutting into the post to get the plate in, holes to bolt it in securely, and drilling a new hole higher up to get the upper belt anchor into a better/safer position. Not an appetising concept to attack what I gather is already an inherently weak anchorage area, at least in the 4 door.
I haven't thought too hard about cutting into the B post from the inside to slide a long bracing plate in, but I suppose it's feasible and easily covered up with trim? But surely that would weaken the post anyway?
So an alternate approach is to perhaps try to reduce the risk of being harpooned by the non collapsing steering column, by fitting an aftermarket steering wheel, and I've heard mention of fitting a collapsible boss, but haven't got around to trying to track such an animal down yet.
I have read on here that the car's design makes it likely that in a head-on the steering column will either not move, or if really pushed back will rotate forwards away from the driver. Not sure I'd want to be too trusting about that... and even if it doesn't move backwards, the driver is still going to move forwards!
I have a standard original spoked wheel which I like very much indeed, and would hate to replace, but realise that if I hit something and instinctively braced against the wheel I'd not only still probably hit the column centre, but would just rip the rim off in a split second. It sure ain't designed to brace against.
And yes, I do realise that bracing is a sure recipe for ripping your shoulder joints apart, but it's something that almost everybody would do without thinking in a pending head-on, and at least in a relatively slow head-on it might stop you hitting the column centre, at the price of surgery to repair your shoulders.
A collapsible column would be a nice thing to have, but I'm not prepared to fit a modern column in an (almost) completely unmodified car (I've seen columns fitted from Mazdas etc in lots of modified Morries back in Oz, which is where I came from to live up here in Scutland, and didn't like the look at all, even though I had two fairly heavily modified (not the column, though) Morries myself many years ago).
So I'm asking for opinions from people who've looked for safety solutions and come up with either something a little better and safer than the lousy B post top anchor point I currently have, OR have fitted an aftermarket wheel that not only doesn't look wrong but may withstand a bit of bracing force if need be without collapsing, AND/OR have any experience with a collapsible boss (which doesn't fill me with any confidence, but anything might help).
Otherwise I'll just have to avoid hitting anything. So far, so good.....................
