A couple things:
Mr EZ: I noted in my post that folks should try your device if they wish. My point was that your device is NOT a substitute for a QUALITY restraint system, not whether folks should buy your device. Your efforts at salesmanship haven't diminished, though
Inertial reels not needed in a Cub? A good friend of mine was killed in a Cub accident, and the proximate cause of death was his head hitting a portable GPS, mounted on the panel. He was wearing fixed shoulder belts, but they were apparently a little too loose, for whatever reason. It happens...I've caught myself flying with loosened belts in airplanes with fixed belts....
Hooker harnesses attach to the Cessna forward spar carry through, indeed. Most Cessna systems do. The point is MOST of those systems (and I believe the Hooker is one) attach to the forward skin of that carry through, whereas the BAS harness uses through bolts all the way through that structure, and a reinforcement on the back side of it. If you pull that attach point out, you're not likely to survive for other reasons. On the other hand, there are cases in the accident record where those front mounted harnesses pulled out in an accident. This is why BAS designed their attach point so robust.
And, a Hooker system was what got the IA I mentioned earlier crosswise with the FAA. That was installed under the provisions of the FAA policy, but a FSDO guy wrote up the mechanic for not using PMAd parts, or doing this with a logbook entry.
Yes, I know, this should not happen, and the mechanic will win the case, but lawyers don't work cheap, last I heard.
BAS is an STCd system.
Look at their web site and view some of the accident photos they've got there with testimonials.....some of those simply don't look survivable.
MTV