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Britax Grow With You ClickTight Review: The Best US/Canada Combination Seat

The Britax Grow With You (Formerly Frontier) ClickTight is one of the two best combination seats you can buy today in the United States. This is particularly important to consider when you think about how many children are boostered too early and how many more are transferred to the adult seat belt when they should still be strapped into booster seats. This review will explore the ins and outs of the Britax Frontier and explain why it’s likely to be the last booster seat you ever need before your child transitions into the adult seat belt.

2020 update: Britax updated the Frontier 90 and renamed it the Frontier G.1.1, and then renamed it the Frontier ClickTight, and most recently renamed it the Grow With You ClickTight. The height and weight limits (as well as the dimensions and weight) of the seat remain the same. It’s still one of the two best combination seats on the market, as well as one of the best booster seats on the market.

Britax Grow With You ClickTight- What’s the big deal?

The Britax Grow With You ClickTight continues a tradition of versatile, high weight and height car seats that makes this one of the most impressive combination seats on the market. It’s a combination car seat, which means it can be used in two configurations: as a forward-facing seat and as a booster. Released by Britax alongside its high weight sibling the Pinnacle 90, the Frontier 90 is a combination car seat that should be on every parent’s shopping list.

Buy the Britax Grow With You ClickTight on Sale with Free Shipping at Amazon here.

Britax Grow With You Limits for Weight and Height

Forward-facing: 25-90 pounds, and between 30 and 58″ in height.  The seated shoulder height of the child can range between 12.5 and 20.5.” Your child should be at least 2-years-old. Of course, research into car safety indicates children should remain rear-facing for as long as possible (the average is 4 years in Sweden, which posts the lowest child fatality rate on Earth), and after rear-facing, the child should remain forward-facing as long as possible. Also note that using a tether is required when using the seat in harnessed mode if the child weighs more than 65 pounds, although Britax recommends it in every installation.

Booster mode: 40-120 pounds, and between 45 and 62″ in height. The seated shoulder height of the child can range between 15 and 23.” Remember that children should remain in booster seats until their seat belts fit them over the shoulder, across the chest, and flat on the upper thighs, or until they pass the 5 step test, which I describe here.

Dimensions of the Britax Grow With You ClickTight

The seat is 19″ wide at its widest point, which is at the shoulders. The seat weighs 25 pounds. Inside, it is around 15.5″ wide at the widest upper portion at the shoulders and 12″ wide in the seat area.

Using the Britax Grow With You ClickTight

The seat arrives in a box that’s designed very well; you don’t have to struggle to get the seat out of the box, which is nice when you consider that it has a decent amount of weight behind it. The seat essentially just slides out, which is where the fun begins.

The installation of the seat is a dream. In fact, it’s my second favorite thing about the Frontier after its harness height range. What I’m talking about is the ClickTight seat belt installation system. It’s designed to allow you to make a safe installation through what is essentially an automatic belt tensioner. I love this! All you need to do is lift the cover so you see the ClickTight panel, route the belt through the green path as needed, and then close the cover. It only takes a few minutes in most vehicles, and from then on, all you need to do is attach your top tether strap to the appropriate tether anchor.

Don’t worry about LATCH weight limits! Don’t worry about complex paths for routing the belt! Don’t worry about locking clips! It’s that easy in the majority of vehicles. This is a reason that, by itself, would make the Frontier worth considering. The Frontier’s ClickTight connection sytem just made car seat installation a lot safer.

Buy the Britax Grow With You on Sale with Free Shipping at Amazon here.

Why Buy the Britax Grow With You?

This is the meat and potatoes of this car seat. The Frontier leads the car seat industry in the United States with its high top harness height setting of 20.5.” Most children outgrow their combination seats by height long before they do by weight simply because most combination seats only offer top harness heights, or upper shoulder heights for children, of 18″ or 19.” Remember that when forward-facing, with very few exceptions, a child can no longer use a seat once his or her shoulders are level with the top harness. Because of the mega-height of the Frontier, outgrowing it by height is a lot harder. Of course children who are in the tallest percentiles by height will still likely outgrow it by height before doing so by weight, but right now, this is as good as it gets. This alone is reason enough to buy the Frontier. The fact that it comes after the easy installation is just icing on the cake.

Besides that fact, the Frontier also includes a steel frame to keep the seat from flexing forward as much in the event of a crash. It also features EPP foam around the child’s head and body to increase levels of side impact protection and reduce stress and strain on the body during collisions. All of these are good things.

Longer harnessing time, decently narrow

As noted above, you are likely to be able to keep children safely harnessed while forward facing in the Frontier longer than in any other car seat, which is a good thing once you’re done rear-facing. Each transition in child seats signifies a decrease in safety (e.g., rear-facing is safer than forward-facing, which is safer than a booster position, which is safer than simply using a seat belt); the longer you can keep a child forward-facing in a harness, the better. The Frontier now leads the field here.

Finally, the Frontier is also simply an easier seat to install than many combination seats, due to its relatively narrow width of 19 inches. That means it’s actually possible to install 3 across in a number of midsized vehicles. I also like the fact that it has a 9-year usable life (remember, car seats do expire eventually), which is  great, although there are seats with longer lifespans (e.g., the newest Dionos).

The Grow With You is an excellent car seat and, in my opinion, one of the two best  combination car seats currently available in the United States for children above the age of 4.  It’s likely to be the last seat your child needs before s/he is ready for a regular adult seat belt. You can buy the Britax Grow With You ClickTight in a range of colors here. Canadians can buy the Frontier here.

If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases. It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.

Diono Olympia Review: Why Buy the Diono Olympia?

When it comes to car safety, you can focus on driving safely and you can focus on choosing a safe car. However, if you have children, you also need to focus on choosing a safe car seat. This is one of a series of reviews I’ll write on what I consider to be the best car seats currently available in the United States.

2015 Diono Olympia – Should I buy it?

The Diono Olympia is another narrow and highly useful car seat released by Diono to respond to the clamor for seats that permit extended rear facing in the United States. It’s a convertible car seat, which means it can be used in several configurations, including as a rear-facing infant seat, a forward-facing seat, and of course, as a booster. Released in May alongside its higher weight siblings the Rainier and Pacifica, the Olympia is a high quality car seat that you’ll certainly be hearing more of.

Buy the Diono Olympia on Sale at Amazon.

Limits for Weight and Height

Rear-facing: From 5-45 pounds, and up to 44″ in height. Your child’s head should not reach past 1.5″ below the top of the headrest. I measure the shell height at 25″ again, which is consistent with previous Dionos and which makes sense since the general height limit by Diono remains unchanged from that of previous models.

Forward-facing: From 20-70 pounds, and up to 57″ in height. Your child should be at least 1, and it’s recommended that s/he is at least 2. Of course, research into car safety indicates children should remain rear-facing for as long as possible (the average is 4 years in Sweden, which posts the lowest child fatality rate on Earth), and after rear-facing, the child should remain forward-facing as long as possible.

Booster mode: 50-110 pounds, and up to 57″ in height. As with the previous Radian line, the shoulders of the child must at least reach the 4th pair of harness slots. Remember that children should remain in booster seats until their seat belts fit them over the shoulder, across the chest, and flat on the upper thighs.

Dimensions of the Diono Olympia

As with the Diono Rainier, the seat is 18.5″ wide at its widest point, which is at the shoulders. The seat weighs 25 pounds. Inside, it is around 14″ wide at the widest upper portion at the shoulders and slightly larger at the thighs.

Using the Diono Olympia

Just as with the Pacifica or Rainier, the Olympia arrives folded securely in a box that seems well designed for it, which makes sense when one considers that the seat takes up almost exactly the same amount of space as its ancestors, the Radian R120 and RXT. I was getting ready for a tricky installation, but it turns out that Diono has worked to simplify the process, which was a welcome surprise.

You will probably need to adjust the straps out of the box, but the learning curve is better than it used to be. Depending on the size of your child, you might keep or remove the harness pads. Per Diono, they are supposed to be used in the 5-point harness only when the child weighs more than 65 pounds.

Keep in mind that you cannot install it in the center of your vehicle with a LATCH set up unless you have dedicated LATCH hookups there; this is common to almost every car seat on the market today in the United States. This means you’ll need to use a seat belt installation along with a locking clip for a middle seat install, and this might be a bit troublesome. Newer seat belts typically lock when extended all the way, so this might not apply in your case.

There are 5 shoulder harness positions that range from 9″ on the low end to 17.5″ on the high end. The recline base must be used when the seat is in a rear-facing position. Because there are 5 different slots for harness height, most children are going to find a position that fits them comfortably for as long as they use the seat. You adjust the harness height from behind the seat by removing straps from the splitting plate and rethreading them into the desired slot. If your child is rear-facing, the slots need to be at or below the shoulders, while they need to be above for forward-facing. Diono is unique in that they do allow you to have forward-facing children with shoulders above the top shoulder harness slots as long as these children stay within the forward-facing weight limit and have the tops of their ears below the top of the car seat.

There is an angle adjuster that is frequently sold alongside the Diono line, as it helps cut down on the extremely large amount of space that the seat can take up when used in the rear-facing configuration. Depending on the size of your vehicle and the amount of space you need in the front seats, you may want to consider purchasing this. This is likely to be the case if you set the seat up directly behind the passenger or driver seats in the first row.

Buy the Diono Olympia on Sale at Amazon.

Why Buy the Diono Olympia?

This is the meat and potatoes of this car seat. The Olympia is one of a handful of seats in the United States that allows you to rear-face a child for up to 45 pounds. As I’ll note further below, this isn’t quite as good it gets, but every pound is precious, as the longer you rear-face, the safer your child is. In the US, parents tend to turn their children around into the line of fire at 1. In Sweden, this typically isn’t done until 4. Children in Sweden are far less likely to die in car crashes than children in the US. It makes that much of a difference. This alone is reason enough to buy the Rainier.

Besides that fact, the Olympia also includes a steel frame and an aluminum reinforced headrest for reinforced head support, in addition to EPS foam around the child’s head and body to increase levels of side impact protection. The sidewalls are not as deep as those in its Rainier sibling, which means potentially less side protection is available. However, it already meets current federal standards, so the benefits of the additional padding in the Rainier are yet to be seen.

However, I do have to note that the two higher weight siblings of the Olympia, the Pacifica and Rainier, have the largest forward-facing capacity of any 5-point harness car seat currently sold in the United States at 20-90 pounds with up to 57″ of height. Each transition in child seats signifies a decrease in safety (e.g., rear-facing is safer than forward-facing, which is safer than a booster position, which is safer than simply using a seat belt); the longer you can keep a child forward-facing in a harness, the better.

The Rainier and Pacifica now lead the field here, which means that if you choose the Olympia, you’re giving up 5 extra pounds of rear-facing ability, 20 pounds of harnessed forward-facing, and 10 pounds of booster time for your child. However, the Olympia is significantly cheaper than the Rainier or Pacifica, and it does offer many of the same benefits for less cost.

Something else that’s neat about the Olympia is that it’s one of only a handful of seats in the United States that can currently be tethered while rear-facing as well as while forward-facing. It isn’t required to rear-face tether, but rear-facing tethering does have its advantages, which I’ll discuss in a forthcoming article.

Finally, the Olympia is also simply an easier seat to install than most, due to its narrow base width of 17 inches. That means it’s actually possible to install 3 across in a number of mid-sized vehicles. I also like the fact that it has a 12-year usable life when used as a booster seat (remember, car seats do expire eventually), which is the longest in the industry right now, although I wish the harness lifespan were longer than 8 years.

The Olympia is an excellent car seat and, in my opinion, one of the best currently available in the United States for children between zero and five. It doesn’t allow you to rear-face or harness forward-face as long as its siblings the Pacifica and Rainier do, so I would recommend those if you can afford to spend a little more. If you can’t, however, or aren’t looking for those features, it is a fine choice for a car seat. You can buy the Diono Olympia in the two colors above here. Canadians can buy the Olympia here.

If you find the information on car safety, recommended car seats, and car seat reviews on this car seat blog helpful, you can shop through this Amazon link for any purchases, car seat-related or not. Canadians can shop through this link for Canadian purchases.

Diono Pacifica Review: Why Buy the Diono Pacifica?

When it comes to car safety, you can focus on driving safely and you can focus on choosing a safe car. However, if you have children, you also need to focus on choosing a safe car seat. This is one of a series of reviews I’ll write on what I consider to be the best car seats currently available in the United States. This review centers on the Diono Pacifica, one of only 4 seats in the US that allows children to rear-face from birth until they weigh 50 pounds.

2017 update: The Pacifica is still basically the same seat since its release; weight and height limits haven’t changed, although fabrics have been tweaked slightly. It’s still one of the best seats on the market for extended rear-facing.

2017 Diono Pacifica – Is it worth it?

The Diono Pacifica continues a tradition of narrow, high-weight car seats that makes this one of the most useful seats on the market. It’s a convertible car seat, which means it can be used in several configurations, including as a rear-facing infant seat, a forward-facing seat, and of course, as a booster. Released this May alongside its high weight sibling the Rainier, the Pacifica is a high quality car seat that you’ll certainly be hearing more of.

Buy the Diono Pacifica on Sale with free shipping at Amazon.

Diono Pacifica Limits for Weight and Height


Rear-facing:
From 5-50 pounds, and up to 44″ in height. Your child’s head should not reach past 1.5″ below the top of the headrest. I measure the shell height at 25″ again, which is consistent with previous Dionos and which makes sense since the general height limit by Diono remains unchanged from that of previous models.

Forward-facing: From 20-90 pounds, and up to 57″ in height. Your child should be at least 1, and it’s recommended that s/he is at least 2. Of course, research into car safety indicates children should remain rear-facing for as long as possible (the average is 4 years in Sweden, which posts the lowest child fatality rate on Earth), and after rear-facing, the child should remain forward-facing as long as possible.

Booster mode: 50-120 pounds, and up to 57″ in height. As with the previous Radian line, the shoulders of the child must at least reach the 4th pair of harness slots. Remember that children should remain in booster seats until their seat belts fit them over the shoulder, across the chest, and flat on the upper thighs.

Dimensions of the Diono Pacifica

As with the Diono Rainier, the seat is 18.5″ wide at its widest point, which is at the shoulders. The seat weighs 25 pounds. Inside, it is around 14″ wide at the widest upper portion at the shoulders and slightly larger at the thighs.

Using the Diono Pacifica

Just as with the Rainier, the Pacifica arrives folded securely in a box that seems well designed for it, which makes sense when one considers that the seat takes up almost exactly the same amount of space as its ancestors, the Radian R120 and RXT. I was getting ready for a difficult installation, but it turns out that Diono has worked to simplify the process, which was a welcome surprise. You can download the Diono Pacifica manual here.

You will likely need to adjust the straps out of the box, but the learning curve is gentle. Depending on the size of your child, you might keep or remove the harness pads. Per Diono, they are supposed to be used in the 5-point harness only when the child weighs more than 65 pounds.

There are 5 shoulder harness positions that range from 9″ on the low end to 17.5″ on the high end. The recline base must be used when the seat is in a rear-facing position. Because there are 5 different slots for harness height, most children are going to find a position that fits them comfortably for as long as they use the seat. You adjust the harness height from behind the seat by removing straps from the splitting plate and rethreading them into the desired slot. If your child is rear-facing, the slots need to be at or below the shoulders, while they need to be above for forward-facing. Diono is unique in that they do allow you to have forward-facing children with shoulders above the top shoulder harness slots as long as these children stay within the forward-facing weight limit and have the tops of their ears below the top of the car seat.

Keep in mind that you cannot install it in the center of your vehicle with a LATCH set up unless you have dedicated LATCH hookups there; this is common to almost every car seat on the market today in the United States. This means you’ll need to use a seat belt installation along with a locking clip for a middle seat install, and this might be a bit troublesome.

There is an angle adjuster that you can buy to use with the Diono seats. It’s a really popular accessory as it helps cut down on the extremely large amount of space that the seat can take up when used in the rear-facing configuration. Depending on the size of your vehicle and the amount of space you need in the front seats, you may want to consider purchasing this. This is likely to be the case if you set the seat up directly behind the passenger or driver seats in the first row.

Buy the Diono Pacifica on Sale with free shipping at Amazon.

Why Buy the Diono Pacifica?

This is the meat and potatoes of this car seat. The Pacifica is one of a handful of seats in the United States that allows you to rear-face a child for up to 50 pounds. Every pound is precious, as the longer you rear-face, the safer your child is. In the US, parents tend to turn their children around into the line of fire at 1. In Sweden, this typically isn’t done until 4. Children in Sweden are far less likely to die in car crashes than children in the US. It makes that much of a difference. This alone is reason enough to buy the Pacifica.

Besides that fact, the Pacifica also includes a steel frame and an aluminum reinforced headrest for reinforced head support, in addition to EPS foam around the child’s head and body to increase levels of side impact protection. The sidewalls are not as deep as those in its Rainier sibling, which means potentially less side protection is available. However, it already meets current federal standards, so the benefits of the additional padding in the Rainier are yet to be seen.

Something that sets the Pacifica and Rainier apart from every other car seat is that they have the largest forward-facing capacity of any 5-point harness car seat currently sold in the United States at 20-90 pounds with up to 57″ of height. Each transition in child seats signifies a decrease in safety (e.g., rear-facing is safer than forward-facing, which is safer than a booster position, which is safer than simply using a seat belt); the longer you can keep a child forward-facing in a harness, the better. The Pacifica, along with the Rainier now lead the field here.

Something else that’s neat about the Pacifica is that it’s one of only a handful of seats in the United States that can currently be tethered while rear-facing as well as while forward-facing. It isn’t required to rear-face tether, but rear-facing tethering does have its advantages, which I’ll discuss in a forthcoming article.

Finally, the Pacifica is also simply an easier seat to install than most, due to its narrow base width of 17 inches. That means it’s actually possible to install 3 across in a number of midsized vehicles. I also like the fact that it has a 12-year usable life when used as a booster seat (remember, car seats do expire eventually), which is the longest in the industry right now, although I wish the harness lifespan were longer than 8 years.

The Pacifica is an excellent car seat and, in my opinion, one of the three best currently available in the United States for children between zero and five.  You can buy the Diono Pacifica in several colors above here. Canadians can buy the Pacifica here.

If you find the information on car safety, recommended car seats, and car seat reviews on this car seat blog helpful, you can shop through this Amazon link for any purchases, car seat-related or not. Canadians can shop through this link for Canadian purchases.

Diono Rainier 2AX Review: 50lbs RF, Safety, Installations, Comparisons

If you want to rear-face until 50 pounds, the Rainier is one of the best options available right now.

Diono has been in the business of making high quality car seats for decades, and I’ve had the pleasure of reviewing some of the safest seats available for children in this country, including the Diono Radian RXT, which directly inspired the Rainier. This review focuses on the Diono Rainier, one of 8 car seats currently available in the US market with the capability of rear-facing children from birth until 50 pounds (the full list includes the Clek Fllo, the Clek Foonf, the Diono Rainier, the Graco Extend2Fit, the Graco Extend2Fit 3-in-1, the Graco 4Ever Extend2Fit, the Nuna Rava, the Safety 1st Advance EX 65 Air+, and the Safety 1st Grow and Go EX Air.).

2020 update: The Rainer has now been updated as the Rainier 2AX. It’s basically the same seat with new colors, and still offers the same 50-pound rear-facing goodness!

2018 update: The Rainier, as well as all other Diono convertibles, were recalled in late 2017 by Diono and new versions were released addressing a potential safety issue involving top tethers. Every seat manufactured from October 2017 onward has been modified to resolve the issue, and the seat continues to be a high-value option for safety-conscious parents.

The Rainier is still basically the same seat since its release; weight and height limits haven’t changed, although fabrics have been tweaked slightly. It’s still one of the best seats on the market for extended rear-facing.

Diono Rainier – What’s the big deal?

The Diono Rainier continues a tradition of narrow, high-weight car seats that makes this one of the most impressive seats on the market. It’s a convertible car seat, which means it can be used in several configurations, including as a rear-facing infant seat, a forward-facing seat, and of course, as a booster. Released in May 2014 alongside its high weight sibling the (now discontinued) Pacifica, the Rainier is a car seat that should be on every parent’s shopping list.

Diono Rainier Limits for Weight and Height

Rear-facing: 5-50 pounds, and up to 44″ in height. Your child’s head should not reach past 1.5″ below the top of the headrest. I measure the shell height at 25″ again, which is consistent with previous Dionos and which makes sense since the general height limit by Diono remains unchanged from that of previous models.

Forward-facing: 20-90 pounds, and up to 57″ in height. Your child should be at least 1, and it’s recommended that s/he is at least 2. Of course, research into car safety indicates children should remain rear-facing for as long as possible (the average is 4 years in Sweden, which posts the lowest child fatality rate on Earth), and after rear-facing, the child should remain forward-facing as long as possible.

Booster mode: 50-120 pounds, and up to 57″ in height. As with the previous Radian line, the shoulders of the child must at least reach the 4th pair of harness slots. Remember that children should remain in booster seats until their seat belts fit them over the shoulder, across the chest, and flat on the upper thighs. This is summarized nicely here in the guide to the 5 step test.

Buy the Diono Rainier 2AX on Sale with free shipping at Amazon.

Dimensions of the Diono Rainier

The seat is 18.5″ wide at its widest point, which is at the shoulders. Keep in mind that this might make puzzling more difficult for 3 across installations with other tall seats. The seat weighs 25 pounds. Inside, it is around 14″ wide at the widest upper portion at the shoulders and slightly larger at the thighs.

Using the Diono Rainier

The seat arrives folded nicely in a box that seems well designed for it, which makes sense when one considers that the seat takes up almost exactly the same amount of space as its ancestor, the Radian RXT. I was getting ready for a difficult installation, but it turns out that Diono has worked to simplify the process, which was a welcome surprise. The full manual is available from Diono here.

LATCH and Seat Belt Installations

You might need to adjust the straps out of the box, but the learning curve is gentle. Depending on the size of your child, you might keep or remove the harness pads. Keep in mind that you cannot install it in the center of your vehicle with a LATCH set up unless you have dedicated LATCH hookups there; this is common to almost every car seat on the market today in the United States. This means you’ll need to use a seat belt installation along with a locking clip for a middle seat install, and this might be a bit troublesome. Also remember that you should not use the LATCH system at all if your child weighs more than 35 pounds when rear-facing or more than 40 pounds when forward-facing. Personally, I prefer the seat belt install anyway, as it gives a lot more space for 3 across installations. Also note that when you’re forward-facing and past 40 pounds, you should also use a tether if you have an anchor available.

Harness Adjustments Require Rethreading

There are 5 shoulder harness positions that range from 9″ on the low end to 17.5″ on the high end. The recline base must be used when the seat is in a rear-facing position. Because there are 5 different slots for harness height, most children are going to find a position that fits them comfortably for as long as they use the seat. You adjust the harness height from behind the seat by removing straps from the splitting plate and rethreading them into the desired slot. If your child is rear-facing, the slots need to be at or below the shoulders, while they need to be above for forward-facing. Diono is unique in that they do allow you to have forward-facing children with shoulders above the top shoulder harness slots as long as these children stay within the forward-facing weight limit and have the tops of their ears below the top of the car seat.

Use the Angle Adjuster to Reduce Front-to-Back Space

There is an angle adjuster that is frequently sold alongside the Diono line, as it helps cut down on the extremely large amount of space that the seat can take up when used in the rear-facing configuration. Depending on the size of your vehicle and the amount of space you need in the front seats, you may want to consider purchasing this. This is likely to be the case if you set the seat up directly behind the passenger or driver seats in the first row. Diono used to state that a child needed to be at least one year old before s/he could use it, but they recently relaxed this requirement and stated that a child simply needs to be able to sit up unassisted and have complete head control. Of course, it’s only meant for rear-facing, but it really does make the seat take up a lot less space; typically between 4 and 7 inches in my experience front to back. Perhaps more importantly for most parents, it can give you many more inches of leg room when sitting in the front.

The Diono Rainier has a Low Profile

The seat itself takes up a low profile, the way previous Diono seats do, although the sides of the seat flare out in a more dramatic way than with previous Diono seats like the Radian RXT. That said, it looks rather large in most vehicles, to be honest. The low side walls make it easier to put children in and take them out of the seat, but it’s not as easy as with the older Dionos, which were truly low profile seats. Preschool-aged children should be able to climb into and out of the seat on their own, even while rear-facing.

Buy the Diono Rainier 2AX on Sale with free shipping at Amazon.

Why Buy the Diono Rainier?

This is the meat and potatoes of this car seat. The Rainier is one of a handful of seats in the United States that allow you to rear-face a child for up to 50 pounds. Every pound is precious, as the longer you rear-face, the safer your child is. In the US, parents tend to turn their children around into the line of fire at 1. In Sweden, this typically isn’t done until 4. Children in Sweden are far less likely to die in car crashes than children in the US. It makes that much of a difference. This alone is reason enough to buy the Rainier.

Besides that fact, the Rainier also includes a steel frame and an aluminum reinforced headrest for reinforced head support, in addition to EPS foam around the child’s head and body to increase levels of side impact protection. The sidewalls are also deeper than in previous Diono models, including its Pacifica sibling, to increase side protection. All of these are good things.

Something that sets the Rainier (and the Pacifica) apart from every other car seat is that they have the largest forward-facing capacity of any 5-point harness car seat currently sold in the United States at 20-90 pounds with up to 57″ of height. Each transition in child seats signifies a decrease in safety (e.g., rear-facing is safer than forward-facing, which is safer than a booster position, which is safer than simply using a seat belt); the longer you can keep a child forward-facing in a harness, the better. The Rainier now leads the field here.

It’s taxi, Uber, and vacation friendly due to its narrowness and collapsability

Something else that’s neat about the Rainier is that it’s one of only a handful of seats in the United States that can currently be tethered while rear-facing as well as while forward-facing. It isn’t required to rear-face tether, but rear-facing tethering does have its advantages, which I discuss here. It’s also FAA approved and can be folded down to the size and profile of a large backpack, making it easy to transport in a portable package (say, when traveling or when going to the airport). This can prevent you from being tempted to rent car seats while on vacation or travel in taxis and Ubers without car seats (two bad ideas).

Finally, the Rainier is also simply an easier seat to install than most, due to its narrow base width of 17 inches. That means it’s actually possible to install 3 across in a number of mid-sized vehicles. I also like the fact that it has a 12-year usable life when used as a booster seat (remember, car seats do expire eventually), which is the longest in the industry right now, although I wish the harness lifespan were longer than 8 years.

The Rainier is an excellent car seat and, in my opinion, one of the eight best currently available in the United States for children between zero and five.  You can buy the Diono Rainier 2AX in a range of colors hereCanadians can buy the Rainier here.

If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases. Have a question or want to discuss best practices? Join us in the forums!

Clek Foonf Review: 50lbs RF, Safety, Installations, Comparisons

The Clek Foonf and the Clek Fllo, which is the cheaper sibling of the Foonf, are two of the most impressive car seats sold in the United States. These are my thoughts on the Foonf, and why it’s easily one of the best car seats you can consider today. In short, it lets you rear-face longer than nearly every other car seat in the country, and rear-facing is the safest position you can put your child in. Let’s dig into the details together!

2018 Update: Clek has changed the colors, as they do every year, but the fundamentals of the seat–rear- and forward-facing weight and height limits–remain unchanged. It’s still one of the best options for extended rear-facing available in the US and Canada.

Clek Foonf – What’s a Foonf?

Clek Foonf review on The Car Crash Detective.
The Foonf is a classic 50-pound seat that’s still among the best money can buy.

The Clek Foonf sounds like something between a baby sneeze and a Swedish dessert, but the truth is that this is one of the most impressive seats on the market. It’s a convertible car seat, which means it can be used in two configurations, including as a rear-facing infant seat, and as a forward-facing seat. It’s the newest version of the Foonf, which is rather similar to the previous 2015 version, except that the harness straps fit better and a few behind the scenes changes were made by Clek in order to improve the seat.

Buy the Clek Foonf on Sale at Amazon with Free Shipping.

Clek Foonf Limits for Weight and Height

Clek Foonf review on The Car Crash Detective.
The Foonf can rear-face from birth with the infant thingy insert.

Rear-facing: 14-50 pounds (unless you use the infant thingy insert, which cuts the lower limit to 5 pounds), and 25-43″ in height. Your child should be able to sit upright without assistance, which typically isn’t reached by most infants until after 6 months, and his or her head should not reach past 1″ below the top of the headrest. The Foonf is one of the best seats for making sure kids actually reach the useful limits of the seat, as it measures around 26.5″ in shell height when the headrest is extended to its fullest position. Most seats top out at 23″ or 24″ in shoulder height, which means a lot of children will outgrow them by height before doing so by weight. Clek took note of this and made sure to provide a usable height range throughout the weight range of the seat.

Note: Using the Clek Infant-thingy infant insert reduces the rear-facing weight limit to 5 pounds and overrides the need for your infant to be able to sit upright without assistance.

Forward-facing: 20-65 pounds, and 30-49″ in height. Your child should be at least 1, and it’s recommended that s/he is at least 2. Of course, research into car safety indicates children should remain rear-facing for as long as possible (the average is 4 years in Sweden, which posts the lowest child fatality rate on Earth), and after rear-facing, the child should remain forward-facing as long as possible. The Norwegians have also caught onto this, and they’re also enjoying record low death rates for children due to auto traffic due to extended rear-facing.

Dimensions of the Clek Foonf

The seat is 17″ wide at its widest point and only 13″ wide where installed at the base. The seat weighs 38 pounds when rear-facing, as this includes the base for rear-facing as well as the anti-rebound bar; it weighs 33 pounds when installed forward-facing.

Using the Clek Foonf

I’m going to be honest: the Foonf is a bit of an intimidating seat when you take it out of the box, partially because you need to spend a few minutes putting it together and partially because it looks even larger once you have it set up in a car. It reminds me a lot of an ejection seat; the kind a fighter pilot would wear, except with much cooler colors. However, that also makes it look solid, and it feels solid too, which shouldn’t matter in car safety, but it’s a nice psychological boost that makes it easier to stand paying as much as one of these can cost.

Clek Foonf review on The Car Crash Detective.
The Foonf probably comes in every color on the spectrum.

Something I like about the Foonf is the height it gives children when rear-facing; in most cases, it will allow them to look out the rear window, which is handy for entertaining children while on the road. The seat itself might not look very comfortable, but when you touch it and put weight in it, it’s quite comfortable. It’s also easy to clean if you spill regular liquids on it, which is inevitable sooner or later.

When it comes to the installation, remember that you need to install it with the anti-rebound bar while rear-facing, and that you should use the tether only when forward-facing. The anti-rebound bar, as its name suggests, is designed to reduce the rebound, or rotational motion, of the seat during a collision, absorbing energy that would otherwise go into the child. The more forces you can reduce in a crash, the better, and Clek even includes a neat little video of their seat being crash tested in a side impact.

Keep in mind that when you’re forward-facing with the Foonf, Clek recommends you use the tether all the time. You shouldn’t ever use it while rear-facing. When forward-facing, you are required to use the tether if you have the seat set in Recline 1. Besides that, Clek states it’s okay to skip it if you’re using a seat belt installation and there isn’t an available tether anchor.

Clek Foonf review on The Car Crash Detective.
But if you want it in classic green and white, you’re welcome to have it.

Something else I like about the Foonf is that it’s a plush, plush seat. I can’t fit into it, but children who can tend to like it. I’ve consulted with many parents who own them, and most agree that their kids don’t mind sitting in it. Of course, this will vary from one child to the next, but it’s something I’ve seen and heard mentioned several times. However, I’ll definitely acknowledge that it’s a seat that some kids just don’t work well with; the foam might vary from one seat to the next.

Furthermore, since the Foonf sits very high, it’s easy to get to the harnesses and buckles it takes to secure it even if you install it next to other seats. It has a good solid feel that makes you trust it, and that’s backed up by its 9-year product life, which is longer than that of most seats on the market. Even the Dionos, which I’ll recommend all day long, can’t match that when it comes to their harness lives.

Something else I’m fond of regarding the Foonf is that it’s quite easy to install in both cars and on airplanes. Keep in mind that it’s not likely to fit in the X-ray systems at most terminals, so you’ll want to leave a bit of extra time for being screened manually. Similarly, in most smaller and mid-sized jets, you aren’t going to get it to fit in the aisles, so you’ll need to be prepared to hoist it above them. However, the Foonf will fit the actual airplane seat well. Don’t even bother trying to fit it in the storage compartments above; that’s just an exercise in frustration unless you’re in first class.

Buy the Clek Foonf on Sale at Amazon with Free Shipping.

Why Buy the Clek Foonf?

This is the meat and potatoes of this car seat. The Foonf is one of a handful of seats in the United States that allows you to rear-face a child for up to 50 pounds. Every pound is precious, as the longer you rear-face, the safer your child is. In the US, parents tend to turn their children around into the line of fire at 1. In Sweden, this typically isn’t done until 4. Children in Sweden are far less likely to die in car crashes than children in the US. It makes that much of a difference. This alone is reason enough to buy the Foonf.

Besides that fact, the Foonf also features crumple zones through its “react” safety system designed to reduce the forces in frontal collisions. There are also metal (e.g., steel and magnesium) substructures and foam on the sides to reduce forces from side impacts. As I mentioned before, the anti-rebound bar is designed to keep the seat more stable in a collision by keeping the seat from rotating as much, reducing tensional forces. All of these are good things.

Something else I love about the Foonf, as I mentioned above, is the 26.5″ rear-facing shell height measurement. Many children outgrow their seats by height before weight, which means that in some seats, you don’t get as much RF time as you otherwise would expect; this is a problem with a number of Britax seats. Clek designed the Foonf smartly and as a result, kids actually have a better chance of reaching past 40 pounds with it than they would with several other seats.

Clek Foonf review on The Car Crash Detective.
There isn’t a 50-pound seat easier to fit 3 across than the Foonf.

Finally, as noted above, the Foonf is also simply an easier seat to install than most, due to its narrow width of 17 inches. That means it’s actually possible to install 3 across in a number of smaller vehicles. Wider seats restrict your vehicle options, and of course, it’s much more expensive to buy a new vehicle than a new car seat.

In conclusion, I’m not going to say the Foonf is the best car seat in the history of car seats, as there isn’t one seat that does everything perfectly. For example, I wish you could RF younger infants with the Foonf; because of its lower weight limit, you do need to wait several months until your little one reaches the lower weight limits and can also sit up unassisted. However, for what it does–provide nearly-unparalleled RF abilities by weight–it has very few equals (namely, the Rainier, the Fllo, and the Pacifica). It is an amazingly safe seat that can be fit in just about any vehicle while reassuring you as a parent that you have literally done everything possible to transport your child safely. Along with the Fllo, Rainier,  and Pacifica, this is one of only four seats I would unequivocally trust my children in while rear-facing.

I recommend the Foonf wholeheartedly. You can buy the Clek Foonf in a range of colors here. Canadians can buy the Foonf here.

If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases. Have a question or want to discuss best practices? Send me an email at carcrashdetective [at] gmail [dot] com.