I'm preparing to recovery the seats in my 65 Formula S. I have a friend who is doing a 66 mustang. The seat bums for his are $66 for both front seats. Mine are $ 240 or so for the front seats. Is there a better way for me to save a buck or two
Is that the worst of your seat bun problems ? That can actually be repaired with a little effort and foam . Mopar seat foam is stupid expensive compared to Ford and Cheby and somewhat generic in fit . Nothing is better than new but repairing what you have is a lot cheaper
I thought the mustang bums were smaller than the Barracuda. You would also have to make the slits for the seat cushion to fit properlyA good friend is into Mustangs and he was planning to do a '65 this winter so I asked him to let me borrow his seat foam to compare to early A-body buckets. He agreed but then his wife convinced him to rebuild their '68 first. So now it will probably be a couple of years before I can get measurements for free. They certainly look to be close enough to work by .I might have to order a set and take a gamble. I would love it if someone could get some measurements before I give in and order Pony Parts.
YOU NEED TO HUNT AROUND, UR QUOTE IS WAY TOO HIGH, TRY WATCHING EBAY FOR A WHILE. I DIDN`T PAY NEARLY THAT FOR BOTH UIPPER/ LOWER FOAM. I STILL HAVE THE UPPER FOAM IF ANYONE NEEDS IT . disregard caps !I thought the mustang bums were smaller than the Barracuda. You would also have to make the slits for the seat cushion to fit properly
It would continue to fall out with a topical sealer on it.On the subject of repairing seat buns, The foam on the bottom of the front seats on my 65 Barracuda are constantly dropping down particles of foam. Can anyone recommend a spray sealer that would stop this? I'm thinking about about trying to find a spray shellac ?
Kit, your mailbox is fullMake your own. Just make molds to cast in 2 part urethane foam, suitable for the purpose. There are a few YouTube videos on castings, from urethane manufacturers. The cost may be more than buying buns, but could use better quality foam.
Made room.Kit, your mailbox is full
The seats pictured in my avatar were from a B body I owned (California car) and the buns were rebuilt using the methods described above . The repo foam for this car is oversized and you end cutting away nearly 30% of the foam to make the covers fit plus pay a lot of money
I didn`t have any of the problems I read here, mine were very tight, but were shaped right, and look stock, except for my custom made seat covers. They were a name brand and bought from Summit racing thru the internet. I bought a new toe sack at Attwoods to replace the old stuff.just about all the new repro buns are oversized to fit multiple seats. my challenger buns were about 1.5 inches too wide and about 1 inch to low. I ended up adding 2 contact cemented high density latex foam 1/2" layers in the middle and grinding .75 inches off the sides to get the skins to fit without looking like a lazyboy recliner that was overstuffed. Same for the 69 charger, 63 impala, 67 mustang , 68 pontiac firebird and all my darts. I sourced them from multiple suppliers to try and get a decent fit but they were all wrong. Heck try and get one for a 63 Lincoln 4 door convertible, those (Expensive = over 700.00 each seat if you can get them) replacements are so bad they hang over the frame 6 inches(3 per side) and they Don't squish. For disintegrating foam on the bottom we spray contact cement on the foam to keep the bun together and stick a sealed burlap or scraps of canvas from the convertible tops that we mak on it to stop air infiltration which rots latex foam. Almost all buns that have started to fall apart on the bottom really are not suitable for a firm seat repair, but can be used if there are no replacement if they are padded with good quality latex foam on top and sealed on the bottom but they will only last 5-6 years max even then since the foam still wants to fall apart and dry out from the air infiltration.