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10-21-2014, 01:04 PM | #1 |
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1933 rear seat lower removal?
I want to get under the rear seat cushion to install differental port and to add oil to my differental. Any help will be great appreciated because I don;t want to break something but removing it wrong.
Thanks for all your experience. |
10-21-2014, 01:14 PM | #2 |
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Location: Solihull, England.
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
Frank, I'm not sure quite why you want to take the seat out, but on my coupe I just crawl under the back and add the oil using the type of oil bottle that has a flexible spout.
It's not difficult. Mart. |
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10-21-2014, 01:56 PM | #3 |
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Location: so cal, placerville, vegas
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
On mine, (33) sedan, the seat cushion is just sitting there. Lift it up and out. So, I'm wondering, maybe something is missing on mine????? There are a couple of 'nubs' on the floor-riser, one on each side, that locate the cushion. The 'nubs' are perhaps 3/4 to 1 inch tall, so the seat is not lifted very much to get it out.
If mine is not right, or something is missing, please tell me. Thanks. |
10-21-2014, 02:36 PM | #4 |
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Location: Massachusetts
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
The cushion just lifts up and out. But that isn't how you fill the axle. Fill it from underneath with an oil pump. The pump can be purchased at any auto parts store. It screws right onto the oil bottle in most cases, and then work the plunger until full. Cheap too.
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10-21-2014, 05:35 PM | #5 |
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
The rear seat cushion on my 33 2 door sedan also just lifts out. Probably wouldn't pass today's safety tests!
There is a canvas cover over the differential which could be removed to make it a little easier to get at the filler plug I suppose. |
10-22-2014, 08:47 AM | #6 | |
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
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That is strange that they had a canvas cover rather than a metal cover as issued later? |
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10-22-2014, 10:21 AM | #7 |
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Location: so cal, placerville, vegas
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
The fabric cover, formed over a wire frame, is common enough that it is also on my very late/ early 34. I'm told that the fabric material varied - could also be the top-insert material. This is one of those areas where if you wanted to know more, I'd suggest contacting David G, or any of the other guru's that post here.
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10-22-2014, 11:40 AM | #8 |
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
It might be, (just a hunch that there was contact between the axle and the floor during extreme bottoming out of the axle. To save things getting bent they may have used something that would give if and when contact was made.
Some roads were a lot rougher then than what we are used to today. Just a guess, but why else would they do that? My 33 coupe has a round metal panel in the trunk floor, but a sedan with 3 people in the back could be subject to a lot more weight over the back (especially if a trunk were fitted) and would experience more suspension movement. Mart. |
10-22-2014, 01:34 PM | #9 |
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Location: southeastern Michigan
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
Rear and rumble seat '33s and '34s had a scrap upholstery or top material insert with a spring wire stiffener sewn into the perimeter. There are three formed tabs in the wire that conform to the three horizontal slots in the short vertical section of the opening in the floor which hold the cover in place.
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10-22-2014, 02:33 PM | #10 | |
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
Quote:
The metal cover they sell is domed so that if the differential bounces up it will not hit the plate. I was told that originally these differential floor covers were cloth in 1933 and in 1934 ford changed them to the doomed metal. My original 1933 had no original plate but a piece of wood there, so I purchased the metal cover. The cloth covers were no longer sold. |
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10-22-2014, 04:18 PM | #11 |
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
The 'piece-of-wood' did not work for me. Even minor bumps on decent paved roads would knock it out. I thought about the 'dog-dish' type of metal, but gave up the idea because my car has the three 'recesses' for the wire-framed fabric to fit into. I chose to leave it more-or-less 'stock', with the fabric. I would never have guessed that these might have been reproduced. I thought it was/is a DIY project.
(I didn't have much trouble locating original metal covers. Didn't try to use one, because of the three recesses being there.) |
10-23-2014, 11:37 AM | #12 | |
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Re: 1933 rear seat lower removal?
Quote:
I will fill from underneath as you said. |
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