robo
Well-known member
Hi , can anyone tell me how easy it is to replace front seat covers on my walk throu earlybay.. Is it something a first timer can or should attempt to do? Cheers rob. :|
Resto-raider said:Time for another upgrade. I ordered new front bucket seat covers from TMI in original style basketweave with smooth sides. The color is off-white (05). I am really happy with what showed up in a big box from UPS.
The covers look pretty much like the original ones.
Couldn't wait to start, so When I got back home last night at 9.30 pm I started tearing off the old covers and managed to replace one cover of the passenger seat with the open back.
Before. Torn and the wrong colour for my Savannah Beige bus.
The back. Loosened all the metal tabs to take off the old cover.
Take the metal strips out of the edges of the old cover, to reuse with the new cover.
Old cover is off
The felt that was underneath was totally shot so I removed it.
New pieces of felt.
To keep the new felt in place I taped them around the edges with some cheap kind of Duct tape. This will make it easier to slide the new cover over it and keeps everything where it should be. I used the tape on the top and also on the side.
New cover is on, but the lower part has not been strapped to the back yet. This is a hard job to do. I had to stand with my full weight on the back while the seat was lying on the floor face down, to compress the springs. Then with some moderate force I managed to hook the lower section into the back.
The end result of the first cover. I believe I started with the easiest one, beacuse of the open back, but it still cost me 1,5 hour to get here. The next one will hopefully go a lot quicker.
I will continue tonight replacing the rest of the seat and perhaps start the same procedure on the drivers side.
Resto-raider said:I didn't use a new hair pad because the one on there was still in good shape although it is still the original one. Today I replaced the seat base cover and this hair pad had to be replaced because it was all sagged and the structure was gone.
I managed to finish the seat tonight. I needed another 1 to 1,5 hours to finish it because the seat base is harder to do than the back.
Old cover
Old cover taken off
Old hair pad removed
New hair pad installed
Plastic over the hair pad and felt to make it easier to slide the cover over the base.
Slit the cover over the seat base, but did not pull it over the outer frame yet.
Compressed the springs and managed to pull the cover over the outer frame.
Put the stuff on the backside on again.
One bucket seat finished
Picture of the seat in the bus, taken in pitch black at 11 pm
subheatadey said:I did mine got the fill from the usual suspects i went for the foam rather than the coconut fibre or whatever it is and i got the seat covers from DB trim at blackpool nice guy and a good fit covers i think were about £150 for the pair - good quality. Tip if you are doing it yourself and particularly with foam cover them in clingfilm before you attempt to put the covers on - It's still like wrestling with a Anaconda mind! :suicide:
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