Forums » Grassroots Motorsports » Lowering Miata Seat Rails
  • Woody

    May 15, 2011 3:59 p.m. Woody SuperDork

    You people had better appreciate this.

    Last week, I added a couple of posts to this thread, regarding comfortable race seats in a Miata: http://grassrootsmotorsports.com/forum/grm/daily-drivable-racing-seats/35229/page1/

    I had a few photos of various rail options and mentioned that I had heard about people modifying the floors and stock seat rails to sit lower in the car. Since I'm in the middle of installing a Hard Dog cage and race seat in my own car, I happened to have at my disposal:

    • a '96 Miata who's factory rear seat mounting bumps have been removed
    • a bunch of extra stock sliders
    • and a couple of spare '95 M Edition seats (currently for sale)

    I decided to see what I could gain by lowering the rails.

    As you can see, I drilled out the spot welds on the factory mounts (using an Eastwood Spot Weld Cutter) and removed them. Be careful not to drill straight through the floorpans. These are what I removed (these two photos are of my old car; eventually, I welded these back into that car): Photobucket

    Here's what you're left with, after grinding the rest of the welds off and adding a little primer (ignore the extra holes in the floor):

    Photobucket

    I had a stripped down stock seat rail that I used to mock up the proper angles. It was easier to work with and you can see the angles better. First, I cut off the locating pin, since the new angle of the rail tabs create an alignment problem with the original pin hole. (As an alternative, I could have enlarged the locating pin hole in the floor.) I cut the pin off with a reciprocating saw, leaving about an eighth inch of material on there, as it doubles as a rivet, holding two parts of the rail together.

    Photobucket

    Then I heated and bent the front mounting tab down a little and the rear tab up a lot. I also used an angle grinder with a flapdisc to smooth out the bottom side of the tabs, removing the lip that's leftover when the original holes were stamped. Here's what it looked like when I was done (the magnet in the middle is just holding it in position to show the new angles):

    Photobucket

    Here's how my prototype rail sits in the car:

    Photobucket

    Note that the rear bolts would pass through the two dimples in the floor pan. Those were put there to allow clearance for the ends of the original rail mounting bolts, after they pass through the threaded floor mounting bumps. It would be wise to flatten these with a hammer and dolly before bolting down the modified rails. Later, you'll need to drill a hole through the floor and bolt down the back of the rails. Don't drill until you have the seat mounted to the rails and the front rail bolts in place, so you know exactly where to drill the holes. You would need to add a large (2"x2") steel backing plate or large heavy washer under the floor to prevent the bolt from pulling through under load.

    Photobucket

    Then, using my prototype rail for reference, I removed the pins and transferred the new angles to a set of complete rails. The prototype is nearest to the camera and the unmodified original is behind it. This should give you a good idea of the new angles.

    Photobucket

    It is important to note that the new angle of the rear tabs will no longer allow the slider to travel through it's full range of rearward movement, as they now bottom out. You gain a little legroom from the new angle, so this may or may not matter to you.

    Photobucket

    That same issue creates a little bit of a problem when you go to mount the seat to the rail, as a 12 mm socket is too big to pass through the lower mounting hole. I resolved this by swapping the rear seat-to-rail bolts with a pair of socket head bolts (Home Depot).

    Photobucket

    Photobucket

    Photobucket

    This shows that the rear mounting holes fall roughly in the same position as the originals. Note the factory holes in the carpet.

    Photobucket

    With the seats mounted in the car, you can see that the modification gained about two inches of headroom. The fact that I did this with '95 M seats makes it a little easier to see the difference.

    Photobucket

    You can just barely see the top of the driver's seat in this photo.

    Photobucket

    Photobucket

    So, after all that, I removed everything and then installed the Cobra race seat that I was working on in the first place.

    Photobucket

    I hope that someone finds this helpful. It's a reasonable solution that can gain you a couple of inches of headroom. If you combine it with a foamectomy, you can gain even more. (You can see from the photos that I've used two different cars and that there were two different roll bars involved.)

    And, on a side note, the '95 M seats are still for sale if you know anyone who's looking for a set.

  • May 15, 2011 4:09 p.m. Joshua Reader

    Excellent thank you for the write up! I'll have to look at this more closely later.

  • Woody

    May 15, 2011 4:22 p.m. Woody SuperDork

    Joshua wrote: Excellent thank you for the write up! I'll have to look at this more closely later.

    Your thread was the one that got me started on all this!

    I lift things up and put them down.

  • CarKid1989

    May 15, 2011 4:35 p.m. CarKid1989 Dork

    link/ sticky for FM website? Keith?

  • Keith

    May 15, 2011 4:47 p.m. Keith SuperDork

    Woody, I'd love to add this to the FM site if you don't mind. I'd prefer to host it on our own server so the link doesn't break sometime in the future - I know there's a rework of the GRM software in the works. I'd give full credit of course.

    We just did something similar to a customer car. I think it happened while I was at the Mitty, so I've only sat in the final result. I'll have to see if Tyler has anything to add about what he did differently.

    Square left in 50 caution ocean!

  • Woody

    May 15, 2011 5:05 p.m. Woody SuperDork

    Keith, sounds good. I'll send you a PM.

    I lift things up and put them down.

  • Slyp_Dawg

    May 15, 2011 6:57 p.m. Slyp_Dawg HalfDork

    this is definitely going to happen on my Miata, as I am in dire need of at least 2" more headroom due to the rollbar I have ( Hard Dog Hard Core Hardtop M2 bar) and the fact that I am 5'11"-6'0" depending on the doctor you ask, with a 34" inseam, and as the car sits now, my helmeted head is a good 1.5"-2" above the main hoop of the rollbar

    "We are on the cutting edge of cocking about" Richard Hammond

  • Woody

    May 17, 2011 4:31 p.m. Woody SuperDork

    Sale pending on the seats.

    I lift things up and put them down.

  • Sultan

    May 6, 2012 8:45 a.m. Sultan HalfDork

    Keith wrote: Woody, I'd love to add this to the FM site if you don't mind. I'd prefer to host it on our own server so the link doesn't break sometime in the future - I know there's a rework of the GRM software in the works. I'd give full credit of course. We just did something similar to a customer car. I think it happened while I was at the Mitty, so I've only sat in the final result. I'll have to see if Tyler has anything to add about what he did differently.

    Keith, Are you guys still intending to post this? I lost the thread and it took me about an hour to find it across all the Miata websites. Of course GRM is the best of all Miata forums:-)

  • Keith

    May 6, 2012 12:25 p.m. Keith MegaDork

    I'd forgotten all about it. As much fun as it is building a major free Miata resource, there are sometimes bigger priorities at work

    Square left in 50 caution ocean!

  • Sultan

    May 6, 2012 7:06 p.m. Sultan HalfDork

    Keith wrote: I'd forgotten all about it. As much fun as it is building a major free Miata resource, there are sometimes bigger priorities at work

    Keith = Awesome!

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