1955 In 1955 Ford offered for the first time lap belts as an option on it's cars. Saab was the first car manufacturer to introduce seat belts as standard equipment in 1958.
Airbags and seat belts
to prevent you form flying out of the windscreen or hitting yourbody on to something
No type of glue should be used on seat belts.
Nash in 1959 offered them as an option
There are "v" belts, "serpentine" belts and "timing" belts.
Cars, airplanes, trains, some buses, shuttles (occasionaly) jets, highchairs, rollercoasters, and anything else you can think of :)
no
Different types of belts have many different uses depending on the need. Drive belts are used for an engines's fly wheel. Weightlifting belts are used to support a person when lifting weights. Seat belts are used to protect drivers and passengers in automobiles.
I can't find a definitive answer, but the first recorded use of a seat belt in an aircraft was by Adolphe Pegoud, a French aviator, and one of the first to accomplish a loop. This was in 1913 and the first seat belt probably coincided with this feat. (Pegoud also became the world's first Fighter Ace.) According to Wikipedia, seat belts weren't commonly used in aircraft until the 1930s. --- The seat belt, for primary use in airplanes, was first created by Seth H. Stoner. He was in the Navy during World War II. He was a Lt. Commander based in Washington and primarily focused on how to reduce the number of accidents and fatalities of pilots taking off and landing on aircraft carriers. He worked with a team and the seat belt was the result of their work. The seatbelt did not appear in cars until later in the 1950's.
You don't. Buy new or good used seat belts. Don't try to fix them if they are not working.
There were no infant car seats in 1956 to speak of. There were attempts to make an infant seat but there were never sold in any quantities. In fact there were no seat belts in 1956 except on the Ford which installed seat belts that year for the first time. No other American manufacture installed them that year. Safety was not a concern at that time.