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Seats too relaxed/reclined?!

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Main Forum' started by rmi, Feb 3, 2012.

  1. rmi

    rmi Junior Member

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    Or the seats of a 2 door GTI or 2 door Beetle! :)

    I'll agree with the angry poster above, though. It is not the car, it IS me. Wish "me" would have realized that before buying this thing. My german econoboxes were just fine. All the American cars that my family has ever owned have been fine. Because I have driven MANY cars since I was sixteen and never had a problem, I never assumed that the most engineered vehicle on the road would give me such a pain in the back.

    And, yes, to LTZR1: Wasn't meaning to be classist or anything. I work with and represent the economically-hard-off and underprivileged, though that does not give me an excuse to use the word "ghetto." Not ignorant, but I guess I don't know that much....oh wait!.......
     
  2. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    I'm 6'2", 190 lbs, 35" inseam, long legs and arms, good shape and seating is working quite well for me. I'm sort of infamous around here for opinions on Prius and other car's driver's seats. I went through a maddening mistake of buying the 2nd generation Prius and never got happy after building a custom driver's seat.
    ----------------------

    Some suggestions -

    - Do some Google research on how to adjust driver's seat for optimal position. It's possible you just have a bad habit going on.

    How to Adjust Seating to the Proper Position While Driving - wikiHow, the free how-to guide

    - try not to drive so much with big bulky soles on shoes. That decreases legroom a tiny bit

    - If it feels like there is too much thigh support, or it's pressing into thighs too much, you pretty much must slide forward a notch or two. At your height, I don't think you should be slid all the way back. I'm 2 notches forward from full back, and I'm 3" taller than you.

    - You don't want to have your seatback bolt upright. I've read articles on car seat adjustment and ergonoics and you seatback should be slightly reclined. Something about like 10 to 20 degrees? reclined back. 45 is too much.

    - another mentioned the steering wheel is hard to reach and many would like it to pull a little closer. The telescope is sort of biaed to accomodate the shortest people who may slide really close to the dash. About the only thing to do is slide forward to accomodate.

    - Your head should be at least a few inches from the roof! You should just about be able to put your fist between your head and the roof.

    - Unfortunately there is no way to adjust the seat bottom tilt. If you had got the 2012 Four, you'd be set because it has the power driver's seat and power lumbar support.

    - I think generally it's not a bad seat at all in this Prius. It stacks up pretty well to many other cars out there. It's not quite as good as Camry seating, but on other hand, it's a lot better than many other cars I've seen out there.
     
  3. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    Here's my 2011 seat slid all the way forward, rest the same. Seatback angle isn't much, maybe 10 to 20 degrees.

    050705 321.jpg

    Here's my Accord Coupe seat. Prius seat is actually more comfortable because of softer seat bottom. Accord seat had a bit more lumbar support.

    050705.jpg
     
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  4. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    2012 Prius Four base gets the power Softex seat also, $29k sticker price.
     
  5. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    2012 Prius Four gets the power Softex seat also, $29k sticker price.
     
  6. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    Auto engineers put a lot of effort into driver's seat design for safety, comfort, cost, and adjustability for a wide range of people. Every model has a different seat in it. They do try hard.
     
  7. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    Get out of the habit of having your seat really bolt upright or totally vertical. If you research, you will see that is not recommended. You should have a slight recline off vertical of something like 10 or 20 degrees give or take.
     
  8. yeldogt

    yeldogt Active Member

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    If you do a search you will find people who have shimmed the seat using different washers to increase the angle. The leather seats in my new 11 are passable -- much better then the cloth seats of a few years ago -- but, they still don't provide any real support.

    The 12's have the power seat but I did not see any improvement in the actual design of the seat -- and the greater rearward travel is not coupled with any more movement on the steering wheel. Long legs with short arms is a worst case scenario
     
  9. rmi

    rmi Junior Member

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    After my 70+ miles today driving through rural country, I realized that the Beetle seat is not at 90, but is not as relaxed as the Prius in the most upright position. I think they may be shaped dramatically different, too, but, like I said, I have driven many cars and NEVER had this type of discomfort.

    BTW, is that a Ninja 250 in your profile picture? Just sold my 2006 Blue 250. About 30,000 miles in about 4 years of ownership! I used to love that bike.

    Ryan
     
  10. LTZR1

    LTZR1 Member

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    As I stated earlier....$29K for a PRIUS is OVERPRICED....don't really care if its' a 4 OR 5 !!!!!
     
  11. RRxing

    RRxing Senior Member

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    Rodney Dangerfield (born Jacob Cohen, November 22, 1921 – October 5, 2004)

    R.I.P.
     
  12. RRxing

    RRxing Senior Member

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  13. xs650

    xs650 Senior Member

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    Ryan, take look at how the front seat mounts are made. A reasonably skilled person could drill out the rivets holding the front piece on, fabricate a simple nearly flat front piece and drop the front of the seat about an inch. That is probably enough to get the uprightness you are looking for. That might (or might not) require modifying the rear mounts a bit to keep them aligned but I can't tell without pulling the plastic covers off of them.

    You shouldn't have to start cutting on a new car, but if that's your only objection it's worth considering.
     
  14. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    Mine is the black GSX-R600 just behind it. Dude standing behind me rode the little Ninja, and with his 15 years of roadracing, he was the best rider on our group rides. We rode on less traveled roads, often small, very twisty, in the local mountains. Good motorcycling roads around here.
     
  15. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    Sounds like you're hinting that becaue of the way it drives.

    So, I guess the Two and Three are also overpriced at $25k and $26.5k repectively, huh? Prices do typically jump a couple grand or so when you dump in 'leather like' seats and upgraded audio system.

    Four is laden with options -

    Navigation
    backup camera
    Homelink/autodimming mirror
    Smart key/push button start
    JBL high end audio system, XM, HD radio
    USB / Bluetooth handfree
    power driver's Softex seat

    A Honda Accord EX-L is about $29k sticker and no nav, no backup cam, no Smart key and gets about half the MPGs. Don't compare Prius to Civic, Corolla, etc... cause I won't be listening. Nothing compares to Prius, there is no exact copy on the planet to date.
     
  16. cycledrum

    cycledrum PSOCSOASP

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    If you break the connection between the rails and front mount feet, you'd still have to cut down the mount feet and find a way to reattach the rails to them (welding) .....

    At that point you'd be 'experimenting' with what may or may not work. The right rear mount can rotate allowing the front to lower, but the left rear mount is in a fixed plane so any pulling down the front will just be bending down and tweaking the left rear mount.

    If it doesn't work, you are left with a permanently altered seat frame. It should cost about $500 for a new Toyota seat frame, then you'd have to completely move all the materials (including an airbag which is an explosive device) from the damaged frame over to the new one, costing someone a lot of time. Toyota would not do this job in any way.

    If you didn't replace the seat frame, you would not be able to trade the car in, and if you sold the car to private party, you could be sued if your buyer was hurt in an accident.

    Fool's game to go modifying factory seat. I set mine aside and modified used Prius seats.
     
  17. xs650

    xs650 Senior Member

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    Replace the front feet with new fabricated parts and bolt them on while saving the stock feet in case you want to put it back to stock. The rear flat foot could easily be handled by making a couple of wedge pieces. It's not rocket science.
     
  18. rmi

    rmi Junior Member

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    Update: My wife, daughter, and I ran around town today doing errands in the Prius. My wife pointed out that only my lower back is making contact with the seat (in the most upright position). So, my problem may be seat position related, but we think it is also seat shape related, too. My intense pain has been in my lower back and upper neck and is probably related to my body shape.

    Instead of a "flat board" type of seat back like my previous vehicles, the Prius' seat is very contoured and has a very pronounced lower back buldge/support. I need to find a way to "fill in" the space between my shoulder blades and the seat back. May have to try out some nice granny quilts or something. For real!

    Thank you everyone for all the suggestions. I am going to get comfortable in this car even if it kills me!

    Ryan
     
  19. rmi

    rmi Junior Member

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    Not rocket science, but it may be getting outside my comfort zone. I have worked on bikes and cars, but have not done much "fabricating."

    I may start out with some sort of pads/back support. We'll see what happens from there.

    I bought this car to use for 10+ years. I know nothing is perfect, but I do feel a good bit of buyer's remorse right now. My wife and I had the "if the Prius was not an option" talk a little, and couldn't figure out what else would fit our needs. A VW turbo diesel wagon or golf? I am reluctant to buy another VW after having owned 2 and having seen another 2 owned in my family. Nothing else compares to the interior size and gas mileage of the Prius, it seems. But I have learned that I may need to pay more attention to seat comfort/position in the future.

    Ryan
     
  20. wick1ert

    wick1ert Senior Member

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    Ryan - Have you tried just pushing your back against the entire seat back and letting it support you? That's essentially what I do, and I tend to have the seat back towards more up-right than most other people I know. I've thrown my back out once and tweaked it a few years after that. I've done some 8 hour trips in the car (with breaks every couple hours), and haven't had any back pain from the seats. Try putting your back all the way against the seat back next time and see what happens.