Should we worry about this?
https://www.consumerreports.org/tod...RAE95tr74RKvteEP30AKxx1H2o1log9Sd67RzSTSwx8Bw
https://www.consumerreports.org/tod...RAE95tr74RKvteEP30AKxx1H2o1log9Sd67RzSTSwx8Bw
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just read the Carseat blog article. thank you.
are we expecting recalls on those seats?
I am freaking out about this a little. I currently have two Frontiers for my 5 and 8 year old. I am moving my 8 year old to a backless booster but I was planning to move the second seat into my husbands car so I wouldn't have to transfer seats for the 5 year old. One of the reasons I got these seats is because they were supposed to be able to stay harnessed longer. Ugh...very frustrated. I just bought the second seat last year because my daughters Boulevard had reached the expiration date. I was going to move my son to the backless then and give my daughter the Frontier but read all this stuff saying you should keep them harnessed until they outgrow it so I bought a second one.
I would most definitely move the 8 year old to a booster unless there are specific circumstances that make you think a harness is safer. Honestly I am a bit fed up with the "harness as long as possible" message because the truth is that we do NOT have any information telling us that harnesses are safer for older (6+ years old) children.
On the other hand, my 5 year old, 45-40 pound child rides in a harnessed Frontier because he's not ready to booster 100% of the time, and I am completely comfortable leaving him there. The worst failures did not happen until they used the 10 year old dummy, and even there we haven't seen the injury reports for the dummies yet. I am fine with my light-ish child riding in a Frontier. But as the blog article says, this will be a decision that each parent makes for their own kids based on their understanding of the situation.
But what about a 40-45 lbs child in a Pioneer or Defender? It broke with a 52 lbs dummy but not a 35 lbs dummy but where in the middle does it start breaking?
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