Seat swaps
#62
Help please
I've read threads on here, please bear with me I'm still confused. I've got an 89 f350 extended cab and the seat is the bench that folds on both sides where the top half is split in the middle. I just found a guy with the split bench out of an extended cab 96. Is it going to be a nightmare to get that seat in or did I get an "easy swap?"
#63
I've read threads on here, please bear with me I'm still confused. I've got an 89 f350 extended cab and the seat is the bench that folds on both sides where the top half is split in the middle. I just found a guy with the split bench out of an extended cab 96. Is it going to be a nightmare to get that seat in or did I get an "easy swap?"
#64
#66
Confused
I still have questions, this is my first time doing anything like this, I just want some answers, sorry but I'm kinda hurt by that response. For anyone who is willing to be patient, I've got the 3 piece bucket console combo and an 89 f350 extended cab that had a bench. Nothing seems to line up, what do I need to do?
#68
I still have questions, this is my first time doing anything like this, I just want some answers, sorry but I'm kinda hurt by that response. For anyone who is willing to be patient, I've got the 3 piece bucket console combo and an 89 f350 extended cab that had a bench. Nothing seems to line up, what do I need to do?
If you don't have the seat pan that goes with the 40/20/40 seats you won't be able to easily put the new seats in using whatever came with your bench seat. And if you got the 40/20/40 seat pan for a standard or crew cab, I don't think that will bolt right in either.
I'm less sure about this, but I think I've read that even if the seats came from a standard or crew cab that they may not fit on the Super Cab/Bronco seat pan nicely.
#69
There is no markings to locate the needed new 4 holes.
I'll need to add 4 holes through the carpet and floor for the outside holes of the above pictured H bracket. These are also the inside bolt locations for the two 40 seats.
But, as others have suggested, I'll set both 40 seats in place and locate them with their outside two bolts. With the H bracket also in place to confirm, this locates the 4 needed holts that secure the inside of the seats and the H bracket.
This would be the same process if I wanted to but these supercab seats in the rear of my crew cab.
And the same process if these supercab seats were to be installed in a single cab.
And crewcab and single cab seats will bolt into a supercab or Bronco by using the crewcab/single cab one piece floor pan, but the sliding/folding function would be lost. And you would have 4 holes where the inside of the seats bolted to that would need to be plugged with a bolt or similar.
Someone please correct me if I have stated this incorrectly, but as someone else has said, now that I have all the pieces in front of me, many of us have way overthunk this.
#70
Now that I have a set of correctly colored 40/20/40 seats from a supercab, and its floor bracket, I have reread this thread again as I plan to put them in the front of my crew cab.
There is no markings to locate the needed new 4 holes.
I'll need to add 4 holes through the carpet and floor for the outside holes of the above pictured H bracket. These are also the inside bolt locations for the two 40 seats.
But, as others have suggested, I'll set both 40 seats in place and locate them with their outside two bolts. With the H bracket also in place to confirm, this locates the 4 needed holts that secure the inside of the seats and the H bracket.
This would be the same process if I wanted to but these supercab seats in the rear of my crew cab.
And the same process if these supercab seats were to be installed in a single cab.
And crewcab and single cab seats will bolt into a supercab or Bronco by using the crewcab/single cab one piece floor pan, but the sliding/folding function would be lost. And you would have 4 holes where the inside of the seats bolted to that would need to be plugged with a bolt or similar.
Someone please correct me if I have stated this incorrectly, but as someone else has said, now that I have all the pieces in front of me, many of us have way overthunk this.
There is no markings to locate the needed new 4 holes.
I'll need to add 4 holes through the carpet and floor for the outside holes of the above pictured H bracket. These are also the inside bolt locations for the two 40 seats.
But, as others have suggested, I'll set both 40 seats in place and locate them with their outside two bolts. With the H bracket also in place to confirm, this locates the 4 needed holts that secure the inside of the seats and the H bracket.
This would be the same process if I wanted to but these supercab seats in the rear of my crew cab.
And the same process if these supercab seats were to be installed in a single cab.
And crewcab and single cab seats will bolt into a supercab or Bronco by using the crewcab/single cab one piece floor pan, but the sliding/folding function would be lost. And you would have 4 holes where the inside of the seats bolted to that would need to be plugged with a bolt or similar.
Someone please correct me if I have stated this incorrectly, but as someone else has said, now that I have all the pieces in front of me, many of us have way overthunk this.
Its been a while but IIRC the shape of the floor pan is different in a bronco/supercab so you canNOT just drill the 4 inner holes and put a supercab 40/20/40 in a reg/crew
#71
Correct. The shape is similar but different. The other thing to beware of is that the Bronco/Supercab floor seems to have changed in some way around 1990 (~2 years prior to 9th gen roll-out). I never figured out what the exact change was - it may or may not matter in most cases - but just something to be aware of.
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#72
Correct. The shape is similar but different. The other thing to beware of is that the Bronco/Supercab floor seems to have changed in some way around 1990 (~2 years prior to 9th gen roll-out). I never figured out what the exact change was - it may or may not matter in most cases - but just something to be aware of.
#73
This question is directed more towards Brad since he clearly has the some of the deepest knowledge of this seat swapping.
I have lost count of how many seat swap threads I have read using search and have not found my direct scenario, so will humbly ask.
What I drive is an 89 F350 SRW CC Longbed with the most basic rubber/vinyl bench seats, having been a maintenance truck years ago. I am disabled and side all over the place, which I need to rectify immediately.
At the pull and pay today I found a 87 Bronco Eddie Bauer with the two separate captain chairs with armrest. The console between was bolted directly to the floor.
I have read Brad's post about using the 3 piece seat pan brackets from a RC or CC and bolting in the bronco seats that way, but don't know if I fully understand it, because having a tough time visualizing it.
That is my understanding thus far, from all I have read, so I can NOT bolt the bronco buckets to my simple single bench seatpan/frame, which uses the 4 primary mounting holes.
So does the 40-20-40 seatpan bolt to the floor with the same 4 bolts, if so then I assume it has three separate mounting holes for the captain chairs as it does for the separate 40-20-40? And does someone have a picture of what the 40-20-40 seat pan & the seat itself looks like?
The seats in question are in decent shape needing a few repairs but the Eddie Bauer seat pattern is really comfy.
So, my primary question is do the rules that apply to the mid 90's trucks also apply to the late 80's vehicles and is my understanding correct?
Thank you for you time and advice. It is greatly appreciated by both my back and I.
#74
From a front seat perspective, a regular cab and crew cab have the same floor shape and seat bolting pattern. As such, seats, seat trays, and seat tracks can be readily swapped between single cabs and crew cabs.
The Extended, or SuperCab is different from the single cab. The Bronco uses the same floor as the SuperCab, and thus uses the same seats and tracks. These seats/tracks do NOT readily swap into a regular cab. I learned this the hard way by getting a pair of bucket seats from a '92 SuperCab for my '91 regular cab. I drilled holes, made some floor modifications, only to find that the seat was positioned way too high. I had to stuff my legs under the steering wheel. Ultimately I went with a factory bucket seat tray and Explorer bucket seats and it's been a great solution.
Specific to your question about the early ('87 - '90) seats from the SuperCab/Bronco, I considered this option myself as the seats and tracks are indeed different from the later '91+ SuperCab seats. I do not believe they are different enough to be a viable solution for what you want however.
The "magic" piece you want is the factory bucket seat tray, preferably complete with seat tracks/sliders. Once you have that, you'll have a huge choice of seats from the junkyard since many of Ford's seats conform to the same bolt pattern.
The Extended, or SuperCab is different from the single cab. The Bronco uses the same floor as the SuperCab, and thus uses the same seats and tracks. These seats/tracks do NOT readily swap into a regular cab. I learned this the hard way by getting a pair of bucket seats from a '92 SuperCab for my '91 regular cab. I drilled holes, made some floor modifications, only to find that the seat was positioned way too high. I had to stuff my legs under the steering wheel. Ultimately I went with a factory bucket seat tray and Explorer bucket seats and it's been a great solution.
Specific to your question about the early ('87 - '90) seats from the SuperCab/Bronco, I considered this option myself as the seats and tracks are indeed different from the later '91+ SuperCab seats. I do not believe they are different enough to be a viable solution for what you want however.
The "magic" piece you want is the factory bucket seat tray, preferably complete with seat tracks/sliders. Once you have that, you'll have a huge choice of seats from the junkyard since many of Ford's seats conform to the same bolt pattern.
#75
This question is directed more towards Brad since he clearly has the some of the deepest knowledge of this seat swapping.
I have lost count of how many seat swap threads I have read using search and have not found my direct scenario, so will humbly ask.
What I drive is an 89 F350 SRW CC Longbed with the most basic rubber/vinyl bench seats, having been a maintenance truck years ago. I am disabled and side all over the place, which I need to rectify immediately.
At the pull and pay today I found a 87 Bronco Eddie Bauer with the two separate captain chairs with armrest. The console between was bolted directly to the floor.
I have read Brad's post about using the 3 piece seat pan brackets from a RC or CC and bolting in the bronco seats that way, but don't know if I fully understand it, because having a tough time visualizing it.
That is my understanding thus far, from all I have read, so I can NOT bolt the bronco buckets to my simple single bench seatpan/frame, which uses the 4 primary mounting holes.
So does the 40-20-40 seatpan bolt to the floor with the same 4 bolts, if so then I assume it has three separate mounting holes for the captain chairs as it does for the separate 40-20-40? And does someone have a picture of what the 40-20-40 seat pan & the seat itself looks like?
The 40/20/40 seat pan bolts to the truck floor with the same 4 holes the bench seat does. The bucket seats CAN bolt to the 40/20/40 seat pan just like the 40/20/40 seats do. you will just need the 40/20/40 seat tracks. The console Screws to the 40/20/40 seat pan with 3 self tapping screws. I dont know how much mor simplistic I can explain it
The seats in question are in decent shape needing a few repairs but the Eddie Bauer seat pattern is really comfy.
So, my primary question is do the rules that apply to the mid 90's trucks also apply to the late 80's vehicles and is my understanding correct?
Thank you for you time and advice. It is greatly appreciated by both my back and I.
I have lost count of how many seat swap threads I have read using search and have not found my direct scenario, so will humbly ask.
What I drive is an 89 F350 SRW CC Longbed with the most basic rubber/vinyl bench seats, having been a maintenance truck years ago. I am disabled and side all over the place, which I need to rectify immediately.
At the pull and pay today I found a 87 Bronco Eddie Bauer with the two separate captain chairs with armrest. The console between was bolted directly to the floor.
I have read Brad's post about using the 3 piece seat pan brackets from a RC or CC and bolting in the bronco seats that way, but don't know if I fully understand it, because having a tough time visualizing it.
That is my understanding thus far, from all I have read, so I can NOT bolt the bronco buckets to my simple single bench seatpan/frame, which uses the 4 primary mounting holes.
So does the 40-20-40 seatpan bolt to the floor with the same 4 bolts, if so then I assume it has three separate mounting holes for the captain chairs as it does for the separate 40-20-40? And does someone have a picture of what the 40-20-40 seat pan & the seat itself looks like?
The 40/20/40 seat pan bolts to the truck floor with the same 4 holes the bench seat does. The bucket seats CAN bolt to the 40/20/40 seat pan just like the 40/20/40 seats do. you will just need the 40/20/40 seat tracks. The console Screws to the 40/20/40 seat pan with 3 self tapping screws. I dont know how much mor simplistic I can explain it
The seats in question are in decent shape needing a few repairs but the Eddie Bauer seat pattern is really comfy.
So, my primary question is do the rules that apply to the mid 90's trucks also apply to the late 80's vehicles and is my understanding correct?
Thank you for you time and advice. It is greatly appreciated by both my back and I.