Author |
Message |
   
Peter Carey (Pcarey)
| Posted on Tuesday, May 21, 2002 - 03:20 pm: |
|
Howdy, I just picked up a 1989 RR Hunter Friday and am starting to make the long list of things to fix/swap out/upgrade. Most of the things that need fixing are fairly simple and a lot have been discussed on this board. One internal modification I'd really like to have that didn't come with this model is the memory seat controls, at least for the driver's side. It has power seats and they work fine (except the passenger back doesn't move but it sounds like a bad motor). But my wife is about a foot shorter than me and likes the seat far forward and high. As you can imagine, I like just about the polar opposite. Is there a way to grab just the control unit off another RR and swap it out, or is the memory feature held in another little black box under the seat and I need that also? thanks pwc |
   
Randall Smith
| Posted on Tuesday, May 21, 2002 - 05:49 pm: |
|
Peter The Hunters are cool. What color did you get?? The wiring and controls for memory seat position is very complex and involves more devises on the truck than you could imagine. Usually the power seats fail because of blown fuses which are probably located under the driver's seat. The next likely cause of malfunction is the switch itself. Randall |
   
Peter Carey (Pcarey)
| Posted on Tuesday, May 21, 2002 - 08:17 pm: |
|
I ended up getting the kinda green color, with plenty of rock chips and a couple of white scrapes on the passenger side. I'd be interested in grabbing a later model shop manual that had the full wiring schema (I'm one of those weird people who actually enjoys looking at wiring diagrams) but as luck would have it, the only manual I found and have ordered is for 86-89. I figured it would be complex, but hopefully straight forward as far as wiring goes. Luckly the previous owner already changed out one of the dead switches. :-) thanks! pwc |
|