I may be wrong but I thought I read something about seatbelts coming under some type of seperate warranty because they are federally mandated safety items.... Check ure warranty book ( I can't find mine right now)
Edit: found this on CarTalk.com:
Quote:
I have a 1994 Saturn SL1 with 38,000 miles. I recently needed the passenger lap belt replaced due to faulty stitching near the buckle. The dealer charged me for this repair. I was under the impression that seat belts were covered by the Federal Government under a five-year/50,000-mile safety warranty. Am I misinformed? -- Barbara
Tom: Somewhat. When there is a bona fide "safety defect," one that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has recognized with the issuance of a recall, then the manufacturer is obligated to fix the item for free for up to eight years.
Ray: The problem is that NHTSA has never declared Saturn safety belts defective. And as of right now, there are not even any official complaints on the books about defective seat-belt stitching on your car, Barbara.
Tom: So there are several possibilities. One is that the seat belts are, in fact, defective, and you're the first one to complain. In which case, you should be sure to register a complaint with NHTSA. You can do that by calling (800) 424- 9393, or you can do it online through our Web site, the Car Talk section of cars.com (go to the "Got a Car" section).
Ray: If NHTSA gets enough complaints about the same safety problem, it'll open an investigation, which could lead to a recall.
Tom: Another possibility is that this was simply a one-time manufacturing defect. Maybe the robot that stitched the seat belt was running on Windows 98 and froze up while it was finishing your particular belt. In that case, the manufacturer's warranty applies, and Saturn or your dealer would decide whether to charge you or not.
Ray: The final possibility is that there is no defect, and that you were in some way responsible for the damage to the belt. Maybe your dog chewed on it to get to the remainder of some spilled cream cheese, or maybe that Black Sabbath bellybutton ring your husband wears is rubbing against it and causing the belt to fray? In that case, the dealer was correct to charge you.
Tom: So if you believe it was a manufacturing defect, then by all means let NHTSA know. But whatever the cause, you did the right thing by having it fixed right away and not taking any chances with your own safety, or that of your passengers.
Don't know if it helps or not.
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My pics!!'03 Rennie w/all Tupperware
Custom Roof Basket
Mopar Tubular Brush Guard
Garmin GPS V & Laptop w/Nav software
RAM products laptop mount
Maglite w/mount
Rear cargo bay tool cabinet
AllJs Rear Shelf
Rear receiver
250k miles!
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