Reshaping Factory Seats

Giving factory seats more support and comfort

by Julian Edgar

Click on pics to view larger images

At a glance...

  • Rebuild your factory seats
  • Cheap and easy technique
  • Add support, change the shape of the seat
  • No legal or insurance problems
This article was first published in 2009.

Changing your car seats for new ones can be a real hassle – there are the legal and insurance implications, not to mention the problems of fabricating brackets. But what if instead of changing seats, you just change the shape of the seats you’ve already got? From legal and insurance perspectives, a seat with an altered shape is still the same seat, and you won’t need to make new brackets or anything complicated like that.

We decided to put theory into practice.

The seats were in a Honda Insight. They might look the right shape but in fact they lack side and lumbar support.

The seats were removed from the car and inspected. This showed that it was easy to unzip the seat upholstery, leaving behind the seat frame complete with foam rubber and steel springing. Improving the lumbar support was as easy as inserting this piece of extra foam in the lower back!

But what about the main seat itself? Foam rubber pieces were cut and temporarily stuck to the seat with tape...

...resulting in these additions.

The largest and smallest people who will sit in the seat then tried it for comfort – surprisingly, despite looking quite rough and ready, the extra foam pieces made a great improvement.

More foam was bought (you need quite firm foam) and then cut and shaped with an electric carving knife.

Special glue is needed to stick foam rubber – this was used to glue the additions to the original seat foam.

Bulldog clips were used to hold the foam additions in place while the glue dried.

The foam additions then looked like this. Note that the foam doesn’t have to be shaped perfectly – it’s fine if there are a few surface imperfections, as they get smoothed out when the upholstery is put back on.

We found that the most critical area to get right was in the height of the additional side-support foam pieces located on the back-rest. Too high and the seat no longer suited people of different heights.

The arrowed grooves shown here in the original foam are matched to seams in the seat cloth upholstery. That is, along these lines the upholstery is clipped into...

... metal wires that run in these grooves. The clips were originally formed from strong wire loops, obviously installed by a special tool. Instead of these wire clips...

... we used cable ties. Once tightened, the head of the cable tie was rotated so that it was buried in the foam rubber.

When the upholstery was reinstalled, care had to be taken that the new foam inserts were positioned correctly (eg not pulled sideways by the upholstery being stretched incorrectly). Note that the reinstallation of the cover slightly changes the shape of the inserted foam pieces, so you should retry the seat immediately after the upholstery has been re-installed.

The seat was then washed with upholstery cleaner and a wet chamois and then dried in the sun. (Washing the upholstery when it was off the seat would have been easier, but had it shrunk, it would have been near-impossible to get it back on!)

It was decided to change the shape of only the driver’s seat (I almost never ride as passenger!) and this pic shows the modified (left) and standard seats. Looking at the seats, it’s nearly impossible to tell which one is altered, but sitting on them tells a very different story...

...and so do the measurements!

Standard Seat

Modified Seat

Height of squab side bolster

45mm

50mm

Height of backrest side bolster

55mm

70mm

Width across flat part of backrest

34cm

31cm

Width across flat part of squab

36cm

33cm

The result is very impressive – much better lateral location and improved lumbar support.

If you reckon your seats are lacking and it’s easy to remove the upholstery, give it a go.

Airbags

If your car seats have airbags within them, we do not recommend that you make seat modifications. But if you chose to do so, at minimum you must have the factory procedure for disabling and handling airbags, and any seat padding changes that are made must not affect the placement or support of the airbags.

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