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... a few beers later
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and as the Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers used to say, welcome back to the third half of our show
at $20 bucks a pop (granted they was not all brand new) that's a few cases of beers right there I tell you what |
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when it comes to rust I'm a firm believer it takes two to Tango so abrasives and chemicals
here we are using Phosphoric acid, it is recommended you dilute it some, so being in California this is a CA blend so I like to dilute it 100% acid and 0% water, it's just acidic enough not to drink it, ha ha |
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rinse, lather, and repeat
after the acid bath I neutralize it with some baking soda water and steel wool, here is a shinny spot of what I was going for |
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here I am shooting it with primer before it flush rusts on me, I started with some red primer (on the bottom) and ranned out, sot that's primer not rust
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It’s a lot of work. I sandblast mine, then repaint.
To answer your question, the shipping is $350. The fully restored seat, using good original foam, is $800. |
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So all together, total for the seats and shipping, and the seats were in good restorable shape. I paid less than what most people want for torn up bucket seats. |
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Your shipping price is darn good for a package that size.
I would've guessed closer to $600 for shipping alone and another $600 at least for a proper seat restoration the way you're doing them. |
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so with our air quality being Unhealthy to breath and Martial Law restricting us to stay indoors I thunk it was the perfect opportunity to continue werking on my bench seat
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Cool, Rusty seat fix! subliminal message. nothing to read here. keep rusty keep rusty keep rusty keep rusty |
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I began the lift off process on the 147 springs in order to be able to tickle the rust underneath them with my trusty angle grinder since the seat frame as a whole won't fit inside the media blaster cabinet which I don't have
who knew Men's Cologne works so well to lubricate them? now if I could just find something to get the water spots off the rest of the frame! |
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Just happened to be tearing down a couple of seat cores, and wanted to show you the difference in the foam.
This is the seat back foam. The one in the back is the 73-80. It’s is 2” taller, and almost 3” wider. Trying to show the width close up in the 2nd pic. And then the next picture is the seat bottom frames for the 81-87, top. The 77-80 is the bottom. Again, the 73-80 seats are larger. Pic #4 is the 81-87 seat bottom foam. Notice the holes along the back, those are for the seatbelts. The 73-80 foam does not have these. Last pic is the ends springs that are always broken on the 73-80 frames. |
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Thanks so much TKCR so let me repost the donor truck pics again here so we can compare it to mine and you tell me if they are the same, maybe the dingleberries at Pick N Pull labeled that truck wrong, or maybe it had it's '85 seat replaced with an older style one like mine at some point. |
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and then this happened to my trusty DeWalter White angle grinder
I guess you can't run a 24" braided wire wheel on a 4" angle grinder, who knew??? so we ordered sum replacement brushes, they should arrive today, so we should be back on the road in no time |
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The seat your showing, that is a 73-80 seat. It’s obvious because of the frame. There is a big difference between the 81-87 frame and the 73-80 frame.
On the subject of the seat back foam, no mistakes on what I posted. The foam in the back is taller and wider, it is for the 73-80 seat back. The one in the front is not as tall and not as wide. That’s for the 81-87 seat back frame. The frame and foam are different sizes. Trust me, I have done enough seats to know all the differences. And I forgot to add a pic of the seat bottom foam for the 73-80, the underside. It has a step up in the foam, where the end springs hit. The 81-87 foam is not like that. |
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Something I should probably cover also is the tracks and frames. You may have noticed I refer to the seats as 73-80, 73-76 but then sometimes 77-80.
Overall the 73-80 seat frames are the same. The difference is, the tracks have to go with the corresponding frame. Another words, the weld nuts for the tracks are in different locations. So for them to bolt directly up to the frame, the tracks need to match the frame. Here is a picture of all 3 tracks 73-76 77-80 81-87 |
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I had to find some pictures to duplicate and edit, to show how and where these tracks bolt to the bottom of the seat frames. Now had GM had the weld nuts in all these locations, then the frames could have been used with both the 73-76 AND 77-80 tracks.
1st pic is the 73-76 and their bolt locations. 2nd is the 77-80, and the top bolt is actually under the rail of the frame and under the cover. |
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Sunday morning we spring back into action
I am really glad I decided to wiggle the springs as at first glance they appeared in decent shape but as I gently manhandled them causing the rust to fall off exposing thinner weaker spots they told a different story. (that's one helluva run on sentence I'm quite impressed) |
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here I took close up pics of how the springs are logically intertwined, later we will use common core math in hopes of assembling them in the same way
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