Jim B
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2002
- Messages
- 4,257
- Reaction score
- 5
I hope Nitro reads this one because the center seat on the Z7 is just the most poorly designed thing i think i have ever seen. Its really the only thing i can find wrong on an otherwise fine boat. My opinion they really dropped the ball on this one and they need to rethink it bigtime. Mine was starting to break and the boat hasnt even hit the water yet. That said, here is what i did to fix it(attempt at your own risk)....
I noticed on mine that i could get my hand in between the gas tank and the panel where the seat is mounted. There is plenty of room in there to work. The seat pan is also very thick and was able to accept screws easily.
I went to Lowes and got the following materials. one strop of 2"x1/2" think aluminum. a 5 pack of #10x3/4" Stainless sheet metal scrwes, 4 1/4" tee nuts( the brad type not the barbed), 4 1/4 20X 1/2" stainless oval head bolts, 1 pack of 1/4" finishing washers. I also "stole" some paste epoxy from my fathers shop since i forgot it at lowes.
Step 1 of my fix was to remove the stock black metal bracket from the seat bottom. Then i drilled 5/16" holes at each top corner then i remounted it back to the seat using the original screws. Here is a shot of that.
Step 2 was the cut the aluminum to size, i ovehung it about an inch and a half from the edge of the seat. The next thing i did was drill 5/16" holes at each end and 5 3/16" holes in the middle to mount it to the seat with the #10 screws. Here is a shot just before i mounted the aluminum.
Step 3 was to bring the seat to the boat and mount it into position and mark the center of where holes needed to be with a sharpie. Then i drilled 5/16" holes at each location for the tee nuts. There is plenty of room in there to drill but i was very careful and put a scrap of wood between the tank and the panel where i was drilling. ONce i had my 4 holes drilled i began to mount the tee nuts underneath. They werent too bad to get in, i just had to really jam my hand in there to get them where they needed to go. I used a thick epoxy paste to glue them into place and the 1/4" bolts( coated in oil so the epoxy wouldnt stick) to hold them in place until the epoxy hardened. here is a shot of the tee nut, one is in place on the lower left and one just before i put epoxy on it and glued it in.
Step 4 once the epoxy hardend(i gave mine overnight) remove the bolts and reinstall the seat using the new bolts and finish washers. Here is a shot of what the finished product looks like. Its not going to go anywhere any time soon i dont think. Its very sturdy now.
I noticed on mine that i could get my hand in between the gas tank and the panel where the seat is mounted. There is plenty of room in there to work. The seat pan is also very thick and was able to accept screws easily.
I went to Lowes and got the following materials. one strop of 2"x1/2" think aluminum. a 5 pack of #10x3/4" Stainless sheet metal scrwes, 4 1/4" tee nuts( the brad type not the barbed), 4 1/4 20X 1/2" stainless oval head bolts, 1 pack of 1/4" finishing washers. I also "stole" some paste epoxy from my fathers shop since i forgot it at lowes.
Step 1 of my fix was to remove the stock black metal bracket from the seat bottom. Then i drilled 5/16" holes at each top corner then i remounted it back to the seat using the original screws. Here is a shot of that.
Step 2 was the cut the aluminum to size, i ovehung it about an inch and a half from the edge of the seat. The next thing i did was drill 5/16" holes at each end and 5 3/16" holes in the middle to mount it to the seat with the #10 screws. Here is a shot just before i mounted the aluminum.
Step 3 was to bring the seat to the boat and mount it into position and mark the center of where holes needed to be with a sharpie. Then i drilled 5/16" holes at each location for the tee nuts. There is plenty of room in there to drill but i was very careful and put a scrap of wood between the tank and the panel where i was drilling. ONce i had my 4 holes drilled i began to mount the tee nuts underneath. They werent too bad to get in, i just had to really jam my hand in there to get them where they needed to go. I used a thick epoxy paste to glue them into place and the 1/4" bolts( coated in oil so the epoxy wouldnt stick) to hold them in place until the epoxy hardened. here is a shot of the tee nut, one is in place on the lower left and one just before i put epoxy on it and glued it in.
Step 4 once the epoxy hardend(i gave mine overnight) remove the bolts and reinstall the seat using the new bolts and finish washers. Here is a shot of what the finished product looks like. Its not going to go anywhere any time soon i dont think. Its very sturdy now.