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Looking for informed opinions to compare seat mount joint

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Accessories & Modifications' started by cycledrum, Jan 29, 2010.

  1. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    Due to extended family concerns and others, I'm looking for informed opinions between the OEM Prius right rear seat mount joint (1st pic) and the welded version from my custom seat (2 pics). btw, there's a weld on the front of foot, 3rd side, too.

    I'll see if I can post the pics full size in the page ...

    050705 114.jpg

    rightrear1.jpg

    rightrear2.jpg

    Thanks in advance.
     
  2. dogfriend

    dogfriend Human - Animal Hybrid

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    They look like pretty good welds to me, but the only way to know for sure would be to test either destructively or if you estimated the force that the original rivets could withstand, you could test non-destructively to that level.

    My intuition tells me that even if the welds failed at that location, the other 3 mounting points would likely be strong enough to keep the seat in place, however, you would need to test this to be sure.

    How are the other 3 mounting points modified? Is the rear outboard mount welded as well?

    There was another thread that became controversial because the OP intended to sell brackets to move the seat and was not going to perform any testing or other analysis. He got angry because we brought up some of the liability issues. I don't have any issue with someone modifying their own car as long as they are aware of the risks; I don't believe anyone should consider selling a modification without doing the analysis and testing to make sure it is a safe product.

    That is my opinion based my education (mechanical and materials engineering) and my prior experience working for a vehicle (large truck) manufacturer.
     
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  3. hyo silver

    hyo silver Awaaaaay

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    It looks like a decent weld, but it's impossible to judge the strength. Was drilling new holes and bolting it not an option?
     
  4. dogfriend

    dogfriend Human - Animal Hybrid

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    I don't think there is enough clearance to use a bolt and still allow the inner rail to slide past the outer rail. I think that is why the original seat uses a low head rivet.

    I think the choice to rivet instead of weld the original is primarily an economic one; its faster to swage the two rivets than weld - you could spot weld, but that wouldn't be as strong as the rivets.
     
  5. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    In moving the mount foot to its new location forward (seat backward), there is virtually no option to use a bolt or rivet:

    1) There are two 'stoppers' , one in the front, one in back (can see in 3rd pic, 1st post), each about 1 inch long on each slider in each rail. Those stoppers ride so low to the rail, they hit the rivets at the front and back.

    So, no option to put a rivet or bolt in the new location as this would negate being able to slide back farther. Welding seems about the only way to attach.

    2) Even though there are no rivets in my modified mounts, there is still a stopping action when sliding all the way back with adjuster bar up. The 'stopper' hits two bumps on the slider.
     
  6. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    left rear, 3 side weld -

    leftrear1.jpg
     
  7. dogfriend

    dogfriend Human - Animal Hybrid

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    Too small for my old eyes to see.
     
  8. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    Fixed.
     
  9. hyo silver

    hyo silver Awaaaaay

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    Then welding it is. It looks to me like you've done a good job, but I'm not an expert. My thinking with the bolts was that there'd be no question of liability. Unfortunately, the current legal climate makes any kind of safety modification risky.
     
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  10. dogfriend

    dogfriend Human - Animal Hybrid

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    Harder to tell, but probably ok.

    I had forgotten how close the outboard rail is to the top of the bolt. That what makes it so difficult to lower the seat - there is almost no clearance at the outboard bracket, so any mod to lower the seat has to involve the seat frame itself.

    One thought that I had is that you could actually "tie" the seat frame to the bracket on both sides using 1/8' aircraft cable (aka wire rope). You would probably need to drill a 1/8" dia hole in the bracket and loop the cable through, then loop around the seat rail(s). You can fasten the loop(s) of the cable using special wire rope fittings or swage the loops if you have the tool to do it (I actually have one). The aircraft cable would restrain the seat from lifting up at the rear if the welds did fail in an accident. Probably overkill though.
     
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  11. cmar

    cmar Junior Member

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    I do metal fabrication & design for a living

    I only have two concerns abut the weld:
    1 - Does it has good penetration, most recreational welders tend to turn the heat down a little to much on the thin stuff for fear of burning through.

    2 - Is the rail a heat treatable alloy? If so the welding will create an extremely hard and brittle boundary where the base metal was heated above the critical temperature.
    You can check this by striking with cold chisel and hammer to try to crack it, or try to test the harness of the base metal ,weld, and interface with a scribe.

    If it is hard, the area could be tempered to a lower hardness. I have done this to thin (.10") sections with a propane torch, but using mapp gas or adding oxygen works much better, or an oxy/acetylene torch is best

    I would not have a problem with the weld otherwise
     
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