I was told today by an NHRA official that you can still use your Impact safety equipment as long as it has not expired yet. So if you have an Impact helmet like I have you can still use it until it has expired after that it's junk.
The helmets are snell rated, not sfi.What did NHRA say about the suits ,gloves,and boots?
The only question you need to ask yourself is: Did IMPACT sell safety items that did not meet the testing requirements that SFI approved?
This issue between IMPACT and SFI has nothing to do with the quality or safety of the products produced by IMPACT. It has to do with a dispute with SFI over the tags that IMPACT used.
All IMPACT items HAVE been approved by SFI by verification of test reports from recognized SFI test laboratories. This product testing requirement comes directly from SFI, so it cannot be disputed. SFI has not stated that the IMPACT producted sold do not meet this requirement
No where in SFI's certification process does it state that once a product is approved by SFI that the patches MUST be obtained by them and only them.
To go to the extreme that SFI has with IMPACT because they did not use the patches manufactured by SFI's vendor falls into a very grey area legally and will either be resolved in court or between IMPACT & SFI. SFI has put themselves into a position of liability as this has already caused damage to IMPACT's reputation and financially.
SFI has certainly gone out on a limb on this one because if they have to reinstate IMPACT it has the possibility of costing SFI quite a bit of money due to the harm it caused IMPACT.
I stand by my statement that IMPACT will be reinstated. It this has to go through the courts, and hopefully it won't, it won't be done by late April and that will only increase the cost to SFI if they lose, which is likely.
The only question you need to ask yourself is: Did IMPACT sell safety items that did not meet the testing requirements that SFI approved? SFI has never stated that, just that the tags used didn't come from them: BFD
This issue between IMPACT and SFI has nothing to do with the quality or safety of the products produced by IMPACT. It has to do with a dispute with SFI over the tags that IMPACT used.
All IMPACT items HAVE been approved by SFI by verification of test reports from recognized SFI test laboratories. This product testing requirement comes directly from SFI, so it cannot be disputed. SFI has not stated that the IMPACT producted sold do not meet this requirement
No where in SFI's certification process does it state that once a product is approved by SFI that the patches MUST be obtained by them and only them.
To go to the extreme that SFI has with IMPACT because they did not use the patches manufactured by SFI's vendor falls into a very grey area legally and will either be resolved in court or between IMPACT & SFI. SFI has put themselves into a position of liability as this has already caused damage to IMPACT's reputation and financially.
SFI has certainly gone out on a limb on this one because if they have to reinstate IMPACT it has the possibility of costing SFI quite a bit of money due to the harm it caused IMPACT.
I stand by my statement that IMPACT will be reinstated. It this has to go through the courts, and hopefully it won't, it won't be done by late April and that will only increase the cost to SFI if they lose, which is likely.
The only question you need to ask yourself is: Did IMPACT sell safety items that did not meet the testing requirements that SFI approved? SFI has never stated that, just that the tags used didn't come from them: BFD
They don't certify frames ,NHRA does that , SFI creates specifications that the manufactures agree to follow.... why they were certifying frames that didn't meet spec.
OK, wrong wording. Why did SFI say they met spec when they clearly didn't?They don't certify frames ,NHRA does that , SFI creates specifications that the manufactures agree to follow.
This is a sport where people can and have been killed. To find that a company is cutting corners on the very safety gear that participants rely on to keep them alive is more than a little disturbing. Even if Impact manages to argue this out in court and come out with a win, I will never purchase products from this company. With a number of quality alternatives, I can't imagine why anyone would.
OK, wrong wording. Why did SFI say they met spec when they clearly didn't?
McKinney used tubing that was not allowed according to the rulebook at the time. The rulebook clearly spelled out normalized (non-hardened) tubing. McKinney used hardened tubing in the lower rails of the JFR frames. Why was this allowed? The frames clearly did not meet the specs in the rulebook, which means they were illegal for competition, yet they were allowed to run. Who, then, is to blame for allowing illegal frames to be used in competition?SFI Didn't say they met spec. McKinney did and McKinney has the clearance from SFI to say it does. McKinney didn't skimp on the tube diameter or thickness nor any of the mandated locations. McKinney bought all his tags from SFI. Everything’s good..NHRA does not certify frames either. They just look at the tag that says it has been that was put on by the guy who made it who's certified to do so because SFI says so. Now if he bought the tags from Wap Pow and not SFI he technically isn't certified no matter how well it was built. Clear as Mud!!!