fupabox
08-10-2009, 07:17 PM
As a 40ish semi-old guy my back isn't what it used to be. I've been spoiled by volvo seats for years and the simple padded slabs in my mini were not friendly to my spine. I'm 6' 190lbs so I also need space. Measured the originals and headed to the wrecking yard. I figured I would need to install the padding and fabric from another seat to the original frame to retain access to the front of the engine. Happy to report I found a near perfect replacement. the lucky doner was a 1993 Toyota Paseo(might as well retain the family DNA).
Removed the seat covers and separated the bottom from the seat back(on the Daihatsus seats). Removed the lower cusion from the Paseo with fabric attached. Sweet jesus it was made for this swap!! trimmed a tiny bit of foam off so the daihatsus frame would fit and hog ringed back nice and tight (5 mins start to finish).http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/th_0806091627a.jpg (http://s180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/?action=view¤t=0806091627a.jpg) On to the back..I cut off the bottom 6 inches of the original backrest(I refuse to call that a seat :))to retain the pivots where the attach to the base. The Paseo seat backs are held onto their frame with 2 12mm bolts on each side and are a few mms from the exact width of the diahatsu's original back rest frame. If you are shorter than me or short legged you may be fine with just bolting the seat backs onto the original frame as in the pic I've included .http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/th_0807091542.jpg (http://s180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/?action=view¤t=0807091542.jpg) If you place the back into your truck and have sufficient room then you DO NOT need to remove the covering on the new seatback..just a few hog rings on the bottom to get access to the side bolts.. If you are tall or long legged you will need to perform a little surgery. The process involves cutting off the top (built in headrest) of the paseo seat and stretching the fabric back down over the sliced off part(obviously don't cut the fabric while slicing the back off just the foam and frame) the nice thing on these seats is the centre panel (the greyish flecked section) is separate from the side bolsters..it slides up and off the main seat back. I also trimmed a bit of foam off the very top of the seat back so it would fit back further against the rear cab wall.finished seats as shown (the paseo headrests have enough fabric left after the surgery to cover the original headrests but I haven't gotten to that yet)with recovered door panels in 4$ worth of tweed fabric..http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/th_0810092004a.jpg (http://s180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/?action=view¤t=0810092004a.jpg)
sorry for the long winded write up
Cheers
Removed the seat covers and separated the bottom from the seat back(on the Daihatsus seats). Removed the lower cusion from the Paseo with fabric attached. Sweet jesus it was made for this swap!! trimmed a tiny bit of foam off so the daihatsus frame would fit and hog ringed back nice and tight (5 mins start to finish).http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/th_0806091627a.jpg (http://s180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/?action=view¤t=0806091627a.jpg) On to the back..I cut off the bottom 6 inches of the original backrest(I refuse to call that a seat :))to retain the pivots where the attach to the base. The Paseo seat backs are held onto their frame with 2 12mm bolts on each side and are a few mms from the exact width of the diahatsu's original back rest frame. If you are shorter than me or short legged you may be fine with just bolting the seat backs onto the original frame as in the pic I've included .http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/th_0807091542.jpg (http://s180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/?action=view¤t=0807091542.jpg) If you place the back into your truck and have sufficient room then you DO NOT need to remove the covering on the new seatback..just a few hog rings on the bottom to get access to the side bolts.. If you are tall or long legged you will need to perform a little surgery. The process involves cutting off the top (built in headrest) of the paseo seat and stretching the fabric back down over the sliced off part(obviously don't cut the fabric while slicing the back off just the foam and frame) the nice thing on these seats is the centre panel (the greyish flecked section) is separate from the side bolsters..it slides up and off the main seat back. I also trimmed a bit of foam off the very top of the seat back so it would fit back further against the rear cab wall.finished seats as shown (the paseo headrests have enough fabric left after the surgery to cover the original headrests but I haven't gotten to that yet)with recovered door panels in 4$ worth of tweed fabric..http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/th_0810092004a.jpg (http://s180.photobucket.com/albums/x119/fupabox/?action=view¤t=0810092004a.jpg)
sorry for the long winded write up
Cheers