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Posted

That is amazing!  I'm going to be reupholstering my motorcycle seat soon (a touring seat) and I'm hoping to do something fun with it...though I doubt it will be quite that badass.  What weight leather did you use?  And the tooling may have looked better before molding, but it looks great as-is!  Well done!

Riley Alfred, Proprietor

Alfred Leatherworks
alfredleatherworks@gmail.com

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Posted
2 hours ago, Dave Richardson said:

Hey, if you could send that seat to me I could critique it better ! Thats top notch, 

Dave

Thanks Dave. For the right amount I'd be happy to send it to any place on the globe ;)

1 hour ago, alfredleatherworks said:

That is amazing!  I'm going to be reupholstering my motorcycle seat soon (a touring seat) and I'm hoping to do something fun with it...though I doubt it will be quite that badass.  What weight leather did you use?  And the tooling may have looked better before molding, but it looks great as-is!  Well done!

Thanks alfredleatherworks. 3.5 mm converts to about 9 to 10 oz. If there's no tooling involved it doesn't have to be that thick at all. something with around 2 mm will do. So somewhere of around 5 ounces. What I've learned from the seats I've done thus far is that you should ad a 2 mm liner of neoprene to the padding. It gives the whole padding more stability without losing the softness. 

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Posted
1 hour ago, Thor said:

...What I've learned from the seats I've done thus far is that you should ad a 2 mm liner of neoprene to the padding. It gives the whole padding more stability without losing the softness. 

Thanks, Thor!  The seat I'll be fixing/restoring is a Mustang seat.  I'm still researching how best to do it.  I love the seat, but the vinyl has cracked in several places, and torn in another (nearly a 4-inch long split).  It's also my daily driver, as I don't have a car...so I've got to figure out how to do this as efficiently as possible.  Your advice is much appreciated!

Riley Alfred, Proprietor

Alfred Leatherworks
alfredleatherworks@gmail.com

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Posted

Sailrite.com has a "how to" video recovering a mc seat with vinly

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Posted

Love it!

Just a man, a shop, and a long list of unfinished projects.....

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Posted
22 hours ago, alfredleatherworks said:

Thanks, Thor!  The seat I'll be fixing/restoring is a Mustang seat.  I'm still researching how best to do it.  I love the seat, but the vinyl has cracked in several places, and torn in another (nearly a 4-inch long split).  It's also my daily driver, as I don't have a car...so I've got to figure out how to do this as efficiently as possible.  Your advice is much appreciated!

For a daily ride I would consider a few more things. There will be lots of rain and exhaust particles. Not that they wouldn't be there with every seat but it will be a lot more. Making sure the water doesn't run off into your seams. The one in the linked video wouldn't really work as the water will stand on the seam an penetrate into the foam in time. Neoprene will help with that. However, having the top run over the sides instead of the other way is much better. 

Usually I'm not a friend of chrome tanned leather, but in this case it might be the better option unless you want to carve something into your seat.

16 hours ago, paprhangr said:

Sailrite.com has a "how to" video recovering a mc seat with vinly

Probably referring to this video http://www.sailrite.com/How-to-Make-a-Pleated-Seat-Cover-for-a-Motorcycle-Video looks well explained. However, see comment above.

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Posted

Thanks for those videos!  They were really informative!

Riley Alfred, Proprietor

Alfred Leatherworks
alfredleatherworks@gmail.com

Leatherworker_net.png

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