I made my own adapters, had a set of the ARE adapters and then nagged Rick
Patton for two years to come up with a creative, easy to use set of
brackets. If you go through here
(http://tr6.danielsonfamily.org/PattonMiataBrackets.htm) you'll see the
whole development process.
The Miata seats are wide but with these brackets, they will slide past the B
pillars.............rubbing against them the whole way. It's not a bracket
issue but a seat width issue.
Tony mentions a seat rail change to his '97 seats that added a stop on one
of the tracks. My seats are from a '93 and also have that stop and I didn't
have to do any grinding to get the rail to clear the stop. I guess it
depends on how your seats were treated during it's Miata life. I also spent
a lot of time in the Miata.net Forum getting specs on the various year seats
and was told that the surfboard style seat rails stayed the same from the
beginning to 1997 and were totally interchangeable over those years.
It takes some time to get the brackets & seats all lined up and installed
but once done, you can remove or install the seats with four bolts in about
5 minutes each. It's so easy that I take the seats out the vacuum under
them!
Bob
Bob Danielson
http://tr6.danielsonfamily.org/
1975 TR6 modified with:
-Throttle Body Injection
-Toyota 5 Speed
-Nissan Differential
-AAW Wire Harness
-CVJs... and more
-----Original Message-----
From: Anthony Rhodes
Sent: Tuesday, May 07, 2013 6:33 AM
To: John & Pat Donnelly
Cc: Triumphs List
Subject: Re: [TR] Tr4a miata seats
The Patton adapters allow for the rear of the seats to be slid inward. They
pivot around the inner front mounting point.
The seats just barely clear the top frame on the drivers side. There is room
for another 1/2" of inward travel at the rear of both seats. And the fronts
seem about right.
Two of the mounts are quite hard to tighten for the 7/16" bolt to the floor
because the bolt head is close to surrounding metal and a little covered by
the miata track above
As my carpet compresses, I may be able to gain a little more inward travel
at
the rear. Also a thin aluminum plate shim under the two outer adapters on
the
drivers side would tilt the top inward a bit. A 1/8" shim would probably do
it
The adapters were easy to use. My seats are 1997's and it would appear that
there was a change in the track design on one rail on each side There was a
stop added to the rear of one track. This made them add a strengthening roll
to the edge of the metal. I did not cut off the stops, but I did have to
grind down the roll so the adapter would sit properly on the rail. Not a
problem. It took a couple of minutes for each side.
** triumphs@autox.team.net **
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