robbertbobbert
New member
It never occurred to me that I need to be careful about what I clean seatbelts with.
I was driving my friend's little sister (she was 6 at the time) this summer and she puked allllllll over the car about an hour from home. And by all over, I mean all over. As in it reached the back of the front passenger's head.
The car was a disaster and she was miserable so obviously we stopped ASAP. We bought a pack of baby wipes at the gas station to clean her and the car up. We used them on her seatbelt and the top of the front passenger one, I couldn't stand the thought of letting them retract like that. Is that a problem?
I really don't think I can afford to replace two seatbelts right now, but I often have multiple passengers in the car. Is it necessary to have them replaced?
I was driving my friend's little sister (she was 6 at the time) this summer and she puked allllllll over the car about an hour from home. And by all over, I mean all over. As in it reached the back of the front passenger's head.
The car was a disaster and she was miserable so obviously we stopped ASAP. We bought a pack of baby wipes at the gas station to clean her and the car up. We used them on her seatbelt and the top of the front passenger one, I couldn't stand the thought of letting them retract like that. Is that a problem?
I really don't think I can afford to replace two seatbelts right now, but I often have multiple passengers in the car. Is it necessary to have them replaced?