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- Slide out cup holder in the base
- Quick fit harness system
- 3-position recline
- Rubberized pivoting armrests
- 5-position adjustable belt positioning guides
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I need to know how to loosen the shoulder straps of a car seat? It seems to have facilitated the mechanism in the back. I’m lost. I give to my daughter for the holidays. Please help if you know. I award points. Thank you very much!
When you have stopped using the car seat? When did you meet them on? and when you stop using a convertible safety seat or child seat?
The CG-Lock – www.cg-lock.com – stabilizes a child’s car booster seat preventing tipping, reducing rocking and bouncing, increasing safety, improving comfort, and reducing the potential for motion sickness. By simply reducing the looseness of the seatbelt’s lap belt — while not affecting the shoulder harness — the CG-Lock makes riding more comfortable while improving safety. For more information, please visit www.cg-lock.com … Booster Car Seat Safety
My kids and I are going camping with my parents next week. We will be driving to the campground in their motor home. The back of the motor home is only equipped with lap belts and the instruction manual for my son’s booster seat says that it cannot be used with a lap belt only. He is too big for any of our 5 point harness car seats and I do not want to spend a lot of money on a new carseat for just one week.
We are looking for a backless booster seat for my child to put in between 2 convertable car seats. The seat we have for him now, just does not fit between the other 2. I believe the width we have now is 16 inches. Does anyone know of any brand booster seat that is narrower than that?
I am booked on a flight on Alaska Airlines next year with my 1.5 year old. He is flying on a full fare adult ticket not a discounted infant fare (usually 1/2 price). Both our tickets are points tickets (Perth through to Vancouver on Qantas then Alaska AL). Qantas does not require a booster seat for children in their own seat, even if they are under 2 (ie. infants) so I was not planning on bringing a car seat as I am travelling alone and will have enough to carry as it is. I read on the Alaska AL website that “children travelling on 50% infant ticket seats must use a booster/car seat approved for car and air travel”. I’m wondering, given that my son will be travelling on a full fare adult ticket whether he needs the booster seat? What will they do if I don’t have one, not let us on the flight? Or, shall I just lie and say he’s 2 – or just board the flight with him in his own seat w/out booster and they will assume is is two and not longer an infant and therefore no booster required.
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