by JCS » Mon Mar 02, 2020 1:20 pm
Rob
Thank you for the comments, I always welcome such comment because very often a different view becomes very useful to make a job even better.
However, in this particular case I must add further comment that hopefully will explain why I took that particular route. In spite of the reasons I give, I should say your dislike of XJ40 seats are exactly the reasons why I like them. These seats are in a different comfort league to the originals, if you tried them for a 300-mile journey I think you may change your mind, ditto left foot rest. I can however understand perhaps why you like to keep to the standard specification.
In January 2014 I was traveling with my wife to see the Bentley agent in South Island, New Zealand. About to board a plane at Manchester airport my wife had a stroke, which resulted in her left arm and leg being paralysed and she was then confined to a wheelchair.
At that time, I had been running a 1953 Bentley for some 28 years that unfortunately had front suicide type doors, these are completely incompatible with a wheel chair and the seat bases were too high with little lateral support. With some sadness after an 8000 hour rebuild and many miles of travel the car was sold, that took all of 10 seconds, to be followed by the R-R rear axle rebuild business and others.
As I had been in automotive and large plant production operations for 50 years, I was able to slim my choice of another classic car model down to a few cars. These had to be 1955 or newer, ideal for Continental touring and capable of holding a disability scooter and wheel chair in the boot.
The choice was a Jaguar 3.4 S type (I did not want a 3.8 S) but with front seat modifications to provide better lateral support. After inspecting many of these cars, and finding none fully fitted the bill, I came across a car that had been stripped, repaired chassis wise correctly on a revolving spit, but not re-assembled with attention to any detail. The story is long and twisted, for another time, but I bought the front XJ40 seats in the purchase deal. Red is not my favourite colour…..but it grows on you…..and I have come to like it on the Jaguar.
I retained the rear S Type seats, giving me all the original advantages of rear head room. I fitted the front XJ seats at the identical angles of the original fronts, with the drivers seat base low to suit me. Conversely the passenger seat was fitted higher to suit my wife and her condition. The rear end support structure of the front seats was fabricated to allow rear passengers to place their feet under the rear of the front seats, while the adjacent forward space was used for fire extinguishers. Even that configuration allowed full fore and aft seat movement without any fouling.
In the photographs it is not possible to pick out, but the seats (Daimler XJ versions I believe) have electric back rest tilt controls and I used electric window switches (Rover?) positioned on the right side for the passenger seat and left side for drivers side, again to suit our needs. The XJ seats were chosen as they are a perfect fit, missing the seat belt rolls etc, and they provide suitable lateral security and easy access for my wife. The original rear seats and the XJ fronts were then trimmed in Ivory leather with red piping and stitching by my local trimmer. Not R-R trimming specification but equal to the original Jaguar trim.
The gauges are left to right, dual oil pressure and water temperature, (non electrical!), vacuum gauge (never be without, engine runs at 20 Hg), and volt meter. All the original gauges also work, except the oil gauge that has been converted to non-electrical……yes I have two oil and two water temperature gauges.
The switches are left to right, Electric fan manual override, Choke feed in series with original auto switch, Spare switch ready wired for engine fast idle control.
Now that I have some practice at posting the images, I will try some more eventually.
Regards
Norman
Rob
Thank you for the comments, I always welcome such comment because very often a different view becomes very useful to make a job even better.
However, in this particular case I must add further comment that hopefully will explain why I took that particular route. In spite of the reasons I give, I should say your dislike of XJ40 seats are exactly the reasons why I like them. These seats are in a different comfort league to the originals, if you tried them for a 300-mile journey I think you may change your mind, ditto left foot rest. I can however understand perhaps why you like to keep to the standard specification.
In January 2014 I was traveling with my wife to see the Bentley agent in South Island, New Zealand. About to board a plane at Manchester airport my wife had a stroke, which resulted in her left arm and leg being paralysed and she was then confined to a wheelchair.
At that time, I had been running a 1953 Bentley for some 28 years that unfortunately had front suicide type doors, these are completely incompatible with a wheel chair and the seat bases were too high with little lateral support. With some sadness after an 8000 hour rebuild and many miles of travel the car was sold, that took all of 10 seconds, to be followed by the R-R rear axle rebuild business and others.
As I had been in automotive and large plant production operations for 50 years, I was able to slim my choice of another classic car model down to a few cars. These had to be 1955 or newer, ideal for Continental touring and capable of holding a disability scooter and wheel chair in the boot.
The choice was a Jaguar 3.4 S type (I did not want a 3.8 S) but with front seat modifications to provide better lateral support. After inspecting many of these cars, and finding none fully fitted the bill, I came across a car that had been stripped, repaired chassis wise correctly on a revolving spit, but not re-assembled with attention to any detail. The story is long and twisted, for another time, but I bought the front XJ40 seats in the purchase deal. Red is not my favourite colour…..but it grows on you…..and I have come to like it on the Jaguar.
I [b][u]retained the rear S Type seats[/u][/b], giving me all the original advantages of rear head room. I fitted the front XJ seats at the identical angles of the original fronts, with the drivers seat base low to suit me. Conversely the passenger seat was fitted higher to suit my wife and her condition. The rear end support structure of the front seats was fabricated to allow rear passengers to place their feet under the rear of the front seats, while the adjacent forward space was used for fire extinguishers. Even that configuration allowed full fore and aft seat movement without any fouling.
In the photographs it is not possible to pick out, but the seats (Daimler XJ versions I believe) have electric back rest tilt controls and I used electric window switches (Rover?) positioned on the right side for the passenger seat and left side for drivers side, again to suit our needs. The XJ seats were chosen as they are a perfect fit, missing the seat belt rolls etc, and they provide suitable lateral security and easy access for my wife. The original rear seats and the XJ fronts were then trimmed in Ivory leather with red piping and stitching by my local trimmer. Not R-R trimming specification but equal to the original Jaguar trim.
The gauges are left to right, dual oil pressure and water temperature, (non electrical!), vacuum gauge (never be without, engine runs at 20 Hg), and volt meter. All the original gauges also work, except the oil gauge that has been converted to non-electrical……yes I have two oil and two water temperature gauges.
The switches are left to right, Electric fan manual override, Choke feed in series with original auto switch, Spare switch ready wired for engine fast idle control.
Now that I have some practice at posting the images, I will try some more eventually.
Regards
Norman