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ff: ff: jap....sapa2 tau mana nak beli cover car seat Britax ultra galaxy...berapa harga dier????TQ in advance |
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Originally posted by marissa_raif at 18-1-2007 11:24 AM
ff: ff: jap....sapa2 tau mana nak beli cover car seat Britax ultra galaxy...berapa harga dier????TQ in advance
marisa,
tak cuba cari dkt mother care ke.. or tempat dkt mana u beli... |
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Reply #128 dealova77's post
dea... how much is that one eh? kat mana u beli? |
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my son dah di ajar guna carseat sejak lahir, so no prob... now letak dia kat belakang co-pilot seat.. mak dok depan dgn ayah... dulu temankan dia kat belakang...lepas umur dia dua tahun.. ajar dia dok sorang kat belakang tu.. giliran mak dia teman ayah dia pulak kat depan...
nak cari carseat for dia punya bakal adik pulak ni... tak pun... yg current punya kasi kat adik, beli baru for my son yg lebih comfy sebab dia pun dah makin besar... |
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siapa nak let go car seat bawah rm 150 boleh inform i tak? |
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korang,
nk tanya..
kalau car seat yg kena pakai seat belt kereta tu..setat umur berapa buleh pakai?
hr tu ingat nk beli masa mydear sale.. tp bila test tgk anak i kecik la..risau kot terbeli seat belt kat leher.. |
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Originally posted by mamapotter at 18-11-2006 09:17 PM
dari umur baper dia dok car seat? anak aku 2 bulan.letak dlm stroller punye hysterical habis melalak...dah mcm2 aku gantung kat stroller dgn carseat nak bagi dia seronok...tapi ataih org g ...
sama ler ngan anak fina mama.....stroller dia siap beli graco...tapi paling lama dia nak duk pun dalam 1/2 jam jer.....car seat pun sama gak....sekarang dah 9mth pun macam tu gak...last2 ayah dia cakap, lain kali beli brand pasar malam jer...tak ler membazir beli yang branded tapi tak pakai....buat pekasam jer dalam bonet keta.... |
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my daughter was trained to duduk dlm car seat on the very day we took her home from the hospital. my husband yg very particular about child safety etc etc. masa dia below 1 yr, we used the graco snugride yg dtg sekali with the stroller.
since her 1st bday pulak dah start pakai the britax roundabout. I think she likes it lah sebab it's nicely padded and tinggi, boleh nampak luar. dia pun tau the routine, kalau nak naik kereta kena duduk car seat. I always put her kat blakang co-driver's seat. bila tumpang naik kereta org and tak duduk car seat, mmg tak berdiam langsung!! sampai i pun pening2 rasa nak muntah sebab dia terloncat sana sini. so mmg patut pun my daughter duduk dlm car seat! |
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i nak tanye...umur bape kene duk lam car seat ek..mcm skang my baby 5 bulan stgh..still duk dalm carrier..tapi mcm dh fit2 dah..i terpk nk beli car seat..tapi car seat start from umur bape aa? |
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Reply #149 nuri^'s post
ada carseat start from newborn boleh pakai |
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Anak saya dah 7 bulan. Baby car seat dia dari newborn dah tak boleh pakai sebab dah tak muat.
So beli dua car seat Britax (one for my car another one for my abe car). Seat ni saya letak dkt seat belakang (tengah tengah) ... seat ni facing tingkap belakang (bukan tingkap dkt pintu tu). |
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Tak reti nak pasang...
Cousin sara ada bagi carseat (2nd hand) utk my baby tp smpi skrg tak pernah guna sbbnya tak reti nak pasang benda tu.. Carseat tu dpt dari baby umur 2weeks smpilah 5months tak pernah sekalipun dia dok dlm carseat tu... Maybe sbb 2nd punya kot sbb tulah tak excited sgt nak letak baby dlm tu... |
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spidernfly This user has been deleted
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Reply #148 reginagrace's post
my sons pun... dr newborn sudah dlm carseat.
bila balik m'sia, if tumpang kereta org takde carseat, diorang refuse to naik. so last-last kena beli another extra 2 carseats. leceh aaa mau angkut carseat turun naik flight everytime pergi balik.... |
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sape2 berminat nak cari carrier+stroller...pm i k..tpaksa beli baru sbb my baby tembam.dh tak muat lam carrier tu. |
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The biggest car safety mistakes parents make -- and how to avoid them
Not using a safety seat consistently
"We were only going to the grocery store ..." "He hates to ride in his car seat, so just this once I didn't make him ..." "He was having a meltdown, so I took him out of his seat for a minute to calm him down ... " Safety experts say they hear these words all too often from distraught parents after tragedy has struck. Remember, a one-time-only lapse can result in a lifetime of regret. Each year, nearly 250,000 children suffer serious injuries in car crashes, and more than 1,600 die. In fact, auto accidents are the leading cause of death in children over age 3. But car seats and booster seats could prevent many of these tragedies. Consistent and correct use of safety seats, for instance, reduces the risk of death in a serious collision by more than 70 percent. Stephanie Tombrello, executive director of the nonprofit passenger safety organization SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A., urges all parents to get a safety seat that's convenient to use, and to make buckling your child into it such a habit that you don't even have to think about it.
Using an old or secondhand seat
That safety seat you scored at a garage sale or secondhand store for a fraction of its original cost may seem like a bargain, but it could cost your child his life. The same goes for an older-model seat given to you by a friend or a relative when her child outgrew it. Not only are used seats unlikely to come with the manufacturer's instructions (vital for correct installation), but they could be missing important parts, have been involved in an accident (even unseen damage can affect the seat's functioning), fall short of current safety standards, or have been recalled due to faulty design. To make sure your child's seat is safe, fill out the registration card when you buy a new car seat or booster seat, and mail it in so the manufacturer can notify you in case of a recall.
If you must use a secondhand seat, make sure it has the original instructions (if not, contact the manufacturer for a replacement copy), has all its parts (check the manual), has never been involved in an accident, is no more than two years old, and hasn't been recalled (click here to check a seat's recall status).
Facing your child forward too soon
Children have large heads and comparatively weak necks, so in a head-on collision (the most common type of crash) a child's head can jerk forward suddenly and violently, resulting in spinal injuries. For this reason, keep your child rear-facing position as long as possible. Just be sure that he rides in a rear-facing seat specially designed to hold children weighing up to 35 pounds or a convertible car seat that's made to hold children weighing up to 35 pounds in a rear-facing position or up to 40 pounds in a forward-facing position. (Note: The 12-months-and-20-pounds rule that many parents cite when turning their child forward in the car is actually the minimum size and age requirement.)
Moving your child out of his car seat or booster too soon
Though safety-seat laws vary from state to state, experts are unequivocal in their recommendations for safe riding:
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continued
Not installing your child's safety seat correctly
Your child's safety seat won't do the job it's intended to if it's not installed correctly. Among the most common mistakes: Not buckling the car seat in tightly enough, and not using the right type of seat belt to secure your child in his booster seat. So before you so much as back out of the driveway, check to see that the seat doesn't tip forward or slide from side to side more than an inch, and make sure that your child's booster is secured with a lap-and-shoulder belt.
Better yet, use the new anchoring system if you can. Since 1999, federal regulation has required most new forward-facing car seats to come with a top tether that snaps into a corresponding anchor in your car, making installation easier and more secure. But because most pre-1999 vehicles don't have the anchoring system, owners of those models may want to consider having their car retrofitted with the anchor system (check with your local auto dealership for information on cost and feasibility).
Since September 2002, all new car seats and vehicles must be compatible with the LATCH system, short for Lower Anchors and Tethers for Children (combining the previously existing top tethers with lower anchors, built into the rear of the car; some cars built between 1999 and 2002 also have the system). Toddler / booster combo seats are required to have both the upper and lower attachments; booster seats are not required to have LATCH.
Not using a locking clip or using it incorrectly
If your car is a pre-1996 model, chances are the lap-and-shoulder belts don't lock unless you come to a sudden stop. This means you need a locking clip |
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continued
Holding your child on your lap
When your child is having a tantrum after hours on the road, it's tempting to lift him out of his car seat and hold him in your arms. The same goes when you're just making a quick dash from one locale to another with a gaggle of friends or relatives and it's easier for everyone to pile into the same vehicle than to take separate cars. This might seem safe enough (after all, you'd hold your child tight if anything happened, right?), but the truth is you can't control what your body might do in a crash. In fact, safety experts warn that even if you're belted in, your child could be ripped from your arms and thrown through the windshield by the force of a collision. And if you manage to get the seat belt around both of you, your weight could actually crush your child to death. So as much as he may scream, and as inconvenient as taking your own car is when the two of you could just hop into someone else's, never let your child ride in a moving car unless he's safely strapped into his car seat or booster. No exceptions.
Letting two kids share one seat belt
This is a big no-no; crash tests have shown that when two children ride buckled into one seat belt, their heads can knock together so hard that it's potentially fatal for both of them.
Letting your child ride in the front seat
Though he may whine and plead to ride in the front seat with you, the back seat is by far the safest place for your child, since that's where he's best protected in a head-on or side-impact collision. In fact, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) strongly recommends that all children under age 13 ride in the back seat every time they get in the car. Other tips on safe riding positions:
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carseat sha dok kt dpn...
letak lam kete sha..bile hbby bwk kete sha..sha duk blakang....cam mem la plak..huhuhuhu...
klau naik kete hbby...xde carseat..so bb kene pegang...huhuhu..jenuh....x gheti duk diam.. |
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aqelnye carseat buh kt blakang..safety dr kt dpn..
buh lk kt dedua car,klau naik kete lg1..angkut skali..yg x best,..bkn nk dukpun..mlompt2..pening dibuatnyeer |
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