![]() ![]() Visa and passport questions: state your country of citizenship. No quotes, selfies, or other clichés: we're not your facebook.īe as specific as possible: where you're starting, dates of travel, budget, interests, places you've been, things you like and dislike. If submitting an image or video include context - read this section of the FAQ. One or two word titles rarely provide enough information. Check our destinations of the week page for country and city tips. Search the subreddit to see if topics have been covered already. Your pictures, questions, stories, or any good content is welcome.Ĭlickbait, spam, memes, ads, brochures, classifieds, surveys or self-promotion will be removed. ![]() My goal is to add a prep-table, storage and fridge behind the double seat, while better utilizing the space between row 1 and 3./r/travel is a community about exploring the world. Reuse factory floor inserts or have a professional install brackets. My goal is to add a prep-table, storage and fridge behind the double seat, while better utilizing the space between row 1 and - I second the comment to not mounting the seats to random places in the floor, the bolts will not hold in an accident. I'll then have a 3 row van + jump seat, all with a lot of leg room. Might do the same for row 4 position, moving it forward enough so it can be used with my foldable rear bed in place. ![]() Note position 3 will be moved forward 2-3 inches reducing leg room if rows 2 and 3 are installed, but I don't plan on using that config so can live with it. Cross bar pitch between seat row is close to with-in seat pitch, removing ~2-3" of seat rail between row 2 and 3 will allow me to put the seat in position 2, position 3 or the position between 2 and 3. I think this can be done fairly easily by hooking the front-seat-legs into row 2 rear-seat-leg cross bars (part welded to the rails that the seats latch into). move row 3 (double seat) forward ~16" like Jeff Lenosky did. On family camping/road trips, 2 your teens sleep on the floor in seat 2 area, they're 5'4ish and still fit! It offers massive leg room and place for a big cooler/foot rest in row 2 position. I have a 12 passenger MR in a 2-0-3-0 config (factory being 2-3-3-4), for my 5 member family or friends on mtb trips. Has anyone done this? Any safety concerns? What would be the likely engineering challenges of a DIY relocation of - I second the comment to not mounting the seats to random places in the floor, the bolts will not hold in an accident. Granted, I could just remove the 2nd and 4th rows, leaving the 3rd and 5th with massive legroom - but that would be a massive waste of space. On a Transit, the 2nd-last rows tend to average around 35" in legroom, but I'd like to achieve something around 45"-48" which would require relocating seats. Since each seat has an integral shoulder harness (at least in 2016), you don't have to worry about needing to locate seats to match up with locations where the shoulder harness would be attached to the ceiling, as is the case with many other vans on the market.įor the last ten years, I have been ferrying my four kids on vacations from Florida to Arizona, Chicago to Padre Island, in a 3-row, 8 passenger, van that gave every row ~40" legroom - and that's getting increasingly cramped as the kids have grown from toddlers to adult size. In theory, you could unbolt 2nd-last row seat bracket from the floor plug the existing holes drill new holes in the floor (potentially threading them in the process) and then install the seat bracket in the new location. Has anyone on these forums relocated a seat bracket? ![]()
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