A friend brought over the driver’s seat from his son’s 66 Hardtop daily driver. Something didn’t feel right. The seat moved sideways a little and the back went “back” a lot further than Ford intended. A quick look showed the adjusting screw was bent and entered the seat back at an odd angle. That was the good part. The screw would not come out without a lot of force, but it did come out. My instructions were to try a fix without removing the seat cover, the kid just bought a house and money was tight. Fortunately, the seat upholstery was black, the same as the temporary driver’s seat from the only other car available, a 66 Shelby, the pressure was on.
I removed the seat back trim and popped it loose from the base. The next step was to remove the seat back and cut the hog rings to fold the upholstery away from the lower bar to try to straighten the threaded insert. Now it got worse. The lower bar was bent, picture 1.
To straighten the bar, I got some 1 1/4 and 1 1/2 inch pipe fittings and threaded sections to use as tooling on my 20 ton press. One of the problems was getting some pressure on the bar but the seat back itself was in the way. Picture 2 shows the rig. The lower fittings consisted of a pair of floor flanges and two 4 inch long pipe sections with a notch cut into them to hold the outer ends of the bent pipe at the bottom. Another notch was cut in the upper pipe section to keep the pressure centered on the bar at the bend. I had to use a 1/4 inch plate at the bottom as the seat back had to go into the press sideways. All this worked, picture 3. The bar got straight, the threaded insert was straightened and re-threaded, new hog rings and the upper section popped back to the base.
There was more. All four studs from the seat track were stripped so new tracks were required. The four screws to attach the track to the seat were stripped and the adjustment rod was stripped.
The bottom line is on these older cars, if something doesn’t feel right, it probably needs attention.
Jim