Phil and Teds is a company that has been making a number of high end strollers like the Navigator and Classic for years. However, it wasn’t until recently that they joined the car seat business, and brought out an infant seat that’s designed to work with nearly every single stroller they’ve put out. When a friend of mine who writes a ton of double stroller reviews picked one up and offered me the chance to review the Phil and Teds Alpha, I couldn’t pass up the opportunity. You can buy the Phil and Teds Alpha infant car seat from Amazon here, as he did.
2015 Phil and Teds Alpha – What’s the big deal?
The Phil and Teds Alpha is a rear-facing only seat, or infant seat, much like the UPPAbaby MESA or Peg Perego Primo Viaggio 4-35 or Cybex Aton 2, my favorite infant seats. It offers a number of standard features common to most infant car seats, such as the ability to be used directly from the hospital and installed with or without a base in multiple vehicles. If you’re looking for a seat that can face forward as well as backward, you’ll want a convertible seat, such as one of these I recommend here.
However, where it stands out from the competition is in its unparalleled compatibility with a range of high end single and double strollers offered by Phil and Teds, a company that’s gained a reputation among parents of multiple kids for their easy-riding and stylish strollers. How does it stand up in terms of safety and usability as a car seat? That was what I set out to find out in my review.
Buy the Phil and Teds Alpha on Sale at Amazon here.
Phil and Teds Alpha Limits for Weight and Height
Rear-facing: 4-35 pounds. Children can be up to 32″ tall, and their heads must not extend within 1″ of the top of the Alpha’s shell. I measure the height of the shell at 19.5.” Children must rear-face for at least one year. Of course, we’re going to aim for at least 4 years as readers of The Car Crash Detective, as the longer we rear-face, the better. The Swedes are the authority in extended rear-facing, and as a result, they have the lowest rates of child fatalities in auto collisions.
Dimensions of the Phil and Teds Alpha
The Alpha is the lightest rear-facing car seat I have ever reviewed at a mere 8.3 pounds. It’s so light you’ll want to use it to haul groceries! Well, maybe you won’t go that far. But it’s definitely a light seat. It has a 6 year product life and a range of harness positions that start at 5.5.”
Using the Phil and Teds Alpha
Base Installation
The Phil and Teds Alpha is an easy car seat to install whether or not the base is used. When the base is used, a LATCH install is rather straightforward, and the seat belt installation is even easier. A blue lock-off is included to make seat belt and LATCH installations a fool-proof process, and ensures that installations are nice and tight.
A ball level is included in the base that helps you make sure you’ve got a good recline for your child’s eight. There are 3 areas in the level, but only 2 are usable. The blue level is for children between 4 and 20 pounds, the grey area is for children between 20 and 35 pounds, and the red area shows a poor recline that cannot be used.
To ensure a good recline is present, a recline foot is included in the base that can be adjusted up or down. If you can’t achieve a good recline with the foot, you can use a tightly-rolled towel at the intersection of the top and bottom parts of the vehicle seat while retaining the recline foot in the retracted position.
Something I found odd about the base is that to release it, you need to press a button (a red one) on the base instead of on the seat itself. The good about this is that it makes the seat itself lighter when you’re using it separately from the base. The bad about it is that you need two hands to release the seat.
Baseless Installation
A baseless installation is also quite straightforward. Thanks to a clip behind the seat, you can even engage in European belt routing, which is still quite rare in rear-facing car seats in the United States. Essentially, Euro routing allows you to get a good solid seat belt installation even when you don’t have the base present. The base, of course, is detachable, and you can buy extra bases to install in as many vehicles as you’d like. I prefer convertible seats, but when I use infant seats, I always buy as many bases as I have cars in which I expect to use the seat, as it’s so much faster to use a base with an infant seat than it is to attempt a baseless installation over and over again.
Fit to children
One of the best features of the Alpha is the wide range of children it will fit. A premature infant pillow and newborn liner are included to help with fits on the lower end. You need to use the preemie pillow if you have a newborn who weighs below 6 pounds.
Additionally, to help fit, there are a pair of loops in the harness; longer and shorter loops. The longer loops are designed to fit larger children while the smaller loops work well with smaller children. You also get a pair of hip harness slots; there’s an inner slot and an outer slot. You use the inner slots if children weigh fewer than 12 pounds and the outer slots if children weigh more than 12 pounds. Small infants will fit much better this way.
I tried the seat with 4 and 7 pound dolls, and both fit well. My test 8 month infant also fit well, although she was getting close to outgrowing the seat at 27.”
Buy the Phil and Teds Alpha on Sale at Amazon here.
Why Buy the Phil and Teds Alpha?
When it comes to infant seats, I see their primary function as providing a comfortable and convenient way for parents to transport newborns and young infants when on the go. Infant seats like the Phil and Teds Alpha aren’t designed for extended rear-facing; for that, you’ll want one of the convertibles I recommend here, as you’ll want to keep rear-facing as long as possible for the safety of your child.
A seat like the Alpha that weighs next to nothing is a great seat because it makes carrying heavy infants a much easier affair. It’s also a good infant seat because it’s nearly guaranteed to fit newborns of all sizes (at least down to 4 pounds), and it’s easy to install and uninstall. I’m also a fan of its compatibility with a wide range of Phil and Teds strollers. Downsides to the Alpha include the fact that you need to keep the carry handle in the upright position when the seat is in use, which looks a bit odd, and the fact that you only get two recline positions to choose from. I recommend the Phil and Teds Alpha heartily, and you can buy the Alpha here in Flint/Red. Unfortunately, it’s not yet available in Canada, but the closest Canadian equivalent I’d recommend is the KeyFit 30, available 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.