A few little updates since it is starting to get cool. Bit of a wordy post but you guys have plenty of spare time.
I have tried any number of seat combinations over the last few builds. Finally (famous last words) settled on using the Sienna relining buckets with the theory that I could rotate the middle and passengers seats as comfy lounge chairs if desired. Well I probably should of waited until I actually had the vehicle before I bought the seats. After fighting the laws of physics for months I have to bow my head in defeat. There is no way they are going to work. So the options.
$800 + each truck seats that are probably too high anyway!
$300 each rebuild of the Bostrom suspension seats.
$650 each replacement Bostrom seats.
$25 each seats new 2nd row of some type of a mini van.
Guess which way I am going. Picked up the minivan seats locally. Unbolted the sliders off the passengers seat. 2 holes drilled in the Bostrom airride base (see I am not totally heartless). Some new grade 8 bolts and one is mated up to the air ride base.
Now the easy part. Lets bolt it back in. Now there is the easy way and the hard way. No prizes for guessing which one I picked. Decided to move the passengers seat across to the other mounting points (1" - 1"1/2 inboard) to give the missus more room. Straight forward as there are captive nuts under the cab to bolt them to. Oops no holes to the captive nuts and I can only really see one nut. Drill up through that nut and expand out the hole. One bolt in. Mount the base to that hole and carefully center pop where the other "should" be. Carefully drill pilot holes. 2 go through and 1 is all steel. Expand the holes out, tap out the solid one and now its ready to bolt in.
Ha you thought that was the end. No I figured that was no where near hard enough. Lets grab a couple of lockable vaults and put them in the seat bases. Nothing to stop a determined thief but good enough for documents and incidentals since the FL does not have any glovebox. That's OK I have all week to get them here and a day to put them in. Hmmm 1st one arrived and it would not unlock (Amazon prime to the rescue, 1 click and a replacement is on the way).
Update. 2nd one did the same thing. Failure rate 66% so far
Come the evening prior to install we have a heck of a storm that blew one of our trees down. Early start Sunday, this is it!! Or is it. So I could get some work done on the rig I had "employed" some local landscapers to reinstall my sprinkler system. It was obvious they didn't understand either my english or my spanglish. So I spend the day gesturing and trying Spanglish, French, Indonesian, Australian and a combination of all of them to get what I wanted done (never again). I failed and still had to stand and support my own tree when I couldn't trust them to even work that out. If you haven't worked it out by now I live in the bloody desert to get away from gardening. My backyard is 1/2 acre of dirt for a reason (the wife's backyard has the pool, slide, patio, BBQ and a rock garden).
Net result, tree 1, landscapers 1, ambo 0.
Now it was not a complete waste of a week working from home. I did manage to get the 3rd seat mounted to a handicapped seat base and wired up. The idea is to get the seat out where our grand daughter can see and be comfortable. This was one of the main drivers for changing from the e350 ambo to the freightliner. Now I have a seat that faces forward, swivels to face where a desk/entertainment area will be behind the drivers seat. And it will also fold down to make a basic console or slide back behind the passengers seat out of the way so we can get through to the back without mastering yoga.
Seat base with lock box in place. (I am not sure the mount is even steel, this clearly shows my lack of welding skills and practice)
Jump seat with control switches built into base.
Passengers seat mounted. Seat is fairly hard but it does have 2 arm rests and did I mention. It was cheap.