Post 664826 by spunkeymonkey on 2013-11-30 09:30:03
Hi iv just signed up to the forum and just wanted to introduce myself, im ollie and im 22 and from essex, iv always loved the t5 engine but until now I havent been able to afford to insure one, I cant remember his forum name but my dad is Paul hassell who ran an autograss special with a 300bhp t5 on full emerald management, so iv spent plenty of time working on them and am now currently saving to get one for myself, im after an 05ish plate ex police v70 t5 as I have a thing for them in white, plus I will know theyve been well looked after, I have however got a couple of questions, do the cloth interiors have heated front seats? Or at least the wiring for them? As I would like to change it to black leather with the heated seats and I want to fit the cruise control aswell etc so just working out how much of a job that will be, thanks, ollie
Post 664828 by T5RatherAmusin on 2013-11-30 09:42:42
welcome!
you can change to heatedseats. ive just fitted a complete R interior in mine....
to get the heated seats to work tho, youll need the software setup from volvo and a button...
Post 664829 by spunkeymonkey on 2013-11-30 09:49:34
Yeah thats fine to get that done all I wanted to know was if the wiring is there for it cos changing the wiringloom is a mission haha
Post 664831 by jamesy12345 on 2013-11-30 10:01:18
Morning, nice user name
:welcome:
Post 664834 by Martin-t5r on 2013-11-30 10:32:23
Welcome, been over to your place before to pick some roof trims up off a shell that you had taken engine from for auto grass car
Post 664836 by spunkeymonkey on 2013-11-30 10:44:15
Haha fair enough, yeah my dad used to break a few 850s for spares for the racing, my dads not racing now but my brother has one the same class but with two suzuki gsxr1000s in the back side by side which is a bit of an animal
Post 664839 by T5RatherAmusin on 2013-11-30 11:02:01
[QUOTE=spunkeymonkey;664829]Yeah thats fine to get that done all I wanted to know was if the wiring is there for it cos changing the wiringloom is a mission haha[/QUOTE]
ye wirings all there. just as said button and software from volvo...thinks its about 100 bob to do
Post 664841 by spunkeymonkey on 2013-11-30 12:28:20
Thats notnto bad then, is it the same with cruise control? Im not sure if the police ones had it but is that just a case of the switches and software? If it is then I will get all the gear together and fitted and just do the software all in one go :)
Post 664842 by T5RatherAmusin on 2013-11-30 12:37:15
not many xplods had the cruise control.
but just a matter of the switches and software agin. you can do this on vida
Post 664844 by spunkeymonkey on 2013-11-30 12:52:00
Ok then thats fine, that sounds easy enough to do so thats alright :)
Post 664859 by Kingsford G on 2013-11-30 16:32:54
Hi and welcome.I have the car you want if the price is right(I`m having the frankie bug lately)
Post 664868 by mikealder on 2013-11-30 17:08:10
This covers what I did recently to add seat heaters to an S60 with leather seats but no seat heaters fitted as they can be quite cold in the winter mornings, this little lot shows what can be done to add heater pads to both parts of the front seats, not a difficult job but does take a few hours to get it right, shouldn't be any different on a V70:
This write up assumes you know how to remove the front seats and the necessary precautions when messing around with front seats that contain airbags. In short you need to remove the four bolts that hold the seat to the chassis before disconnecting the cars battery only then can you disconnect the seats electrical connector(s) to remove the seat from the car.
Firstly you need to remove all the hog rings securing the bottom of the leather cover to the base of the seat, best removed using wire cutters by twisting the ring to undo it before threading it out of the seat material:
Underneath the seat at the rear of the base are a few more hog rings attaching the leather cover to the seat springs, again remove the rings to release the cover
With all the hog rings removed from around the base the sides should pull up over the base foam insert:
Carefully lift the leather cover up to expose the first hog ring connecting the cover to the foam base then remove it, take care not to apply too much vertical force though as you don't want to pull the metal rod out of the foam base
Continue removing hog rings from both sides of the base until you get to the first set of rings running across the base of the seat, remove the hog rings
Then continue working further rearwards to get to the next set of rings running across the seat, remove these rings
Eventually you will have the leather base cover removed although we left the rear most hog rings in place as we could work around them but you should end up with the seat base looking something like this:
Place the heater mat on to the foam base and push the electrical wires through to the rear of the seat, push the seat heater down in to the channel where the hog rings need to go running side to side and mark the area with a felt tip pen:
Working further forwards again push the heater mat in to the next channel in the foam base running side to side and mark the location with a felt tip pen:
Towards the rear of the heater mat is a temperature switch, this needs to sit in to a small recess in the foam otherwise you will feel it when sitting in the seat, simply tear out a small chuck of foam from the base to accommodate the temp sensor:
The location of the seat temperature sensor although it is difficult to see from the picture, it is very easy to locate by feel:
Cut the heater mat where marked up but don't cut the outer 1" strips as these run the power forwards to the rest of the seat heater mat, the slots are required to re-secure the seat cover later on:
The lower side of the heater mat is covered with self-adhesive strips, remove the backing paper and secure the mat in to position making sure that at the two channels running side to side you push the may in to the groove to seat it fully:
Finally put a length of adhesive tape over the leading edge of the heater mat to secure it to the foam base:
Here we decided to cheat using more modern kit than the hog rings removed earlier as getting new hog rings in place was nigh on impossible due to the restricted access, firstly tywraps were fitted to the leather seat cover:
To be continued:
Post 664931 by merc85 on 2013-11-30 20:47:34
Welcome mate, another one from essex ;)
Post 665057 by Wobbly Dave on 2013-12-01 13:56:14
Welcome spunkey son of Paul. I hope your Dad's doing well. The firm that is doing my race engine are also into Autograss. Given the array of available cars - I'd be tempted to have a look at the C70. They are cheap as chips and for a young lad like yourself I think would be a much better choice than ex-plod.