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Raising the drivers seat.
- Grima
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- Roger Fairclough
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Roger
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- Grima
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I think it is but the insurance part is a pain.
Claim it as a mobility car. Then you can have a chair that swivel's out & lowers you down.
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Temeraire (2018 quasar grey automatic)
One of the last 200ish of the gen3s, probably.
ADOS Attention Deficit Ooooh Shiny!
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- Groenewald
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I am going to make some custom spacers from oilon: I still have some in my workshop and the stuff is EXTREMELY durable.
How difficult is it to remove the seats on a Gen4?
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- CC Baxter
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- Roger Fairclough
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It's not necessary to remove the seat from the car. If you want to though, you will find that disconnecting the two electrical connections - seat belt warning and seat heaters - takes longer than removing 4 bolts!
Roger
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- Groenewald
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CC Baxter wrote: I'm a great fan of plastics for engineering use (easy to machine, cheap to buy) but I'm not sure of your choice of Oilon. You're choosing a material that's main selling point is inbuilt lubrication. Rather than slippery seat mounts wouldn't Delrin for example be a better choice? Only a thought and if you can source something else quicker, where's the harm? Chris
Good point. I have already decided on Delrin. I think I still have a thick enough rod lying around.
The spacers are more visible from the outside than I thought and the green oilon will look downright weird...
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l will try some aluminium spacers. One thing, when you loosen the rear seat bolt, the captive nut inside also seems to become loose.
Can l just confirm that the nuts don't disappear inside the floor when you remove the bolts?
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Anyway if you want to raise the seat a little, I don’t see why you couldn’t just buy longer bolts and use some spacers, I think the bolts are M10 (possibly M8), and there is plenty of room for a spacer, say 20 or 30mm square or round drilled for the bolts and length cut to suit.
If you were only going up 10-15mm, no one would notice, especially if you do both sides and with a decent spacer the strength and rigidity would be unchanged.
You can buy seat relocation brackets, these allow the seat to be moved further back, they are around 5mm thick, so you could mount them with a spacer and that would give a very solid platform for the raised seat.
Alternatively buy some of these tailored seat covers, they will raise you up a bit.
Robin
2020 blue SZ5 (one of the last to be registered in the UK)
Ex 2011 Blue Jimny SZ4
Northumberland Jimny Blog
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