Forester seats

D

Dick Monahan

You guys have convinced me that the Forester is ok on the highway (see topic
below). I just drove one, and I agree. It has a vibration between 65 &
80mph, but that's probably a tire or wheel balance problem.

Now, what about the seats. This is a fancy model, with leather seats. I
found it uncomfortably hard. I tried playing with those two knobs on the
left, but only succeeded in making it more uncomfortable. It gave me a back
ache in less than 30 minutes. Any suggestions?

Dick.
 
Now, what about the seats. This is a fancy model, with leather seats. I
found it uncomfortably hard. I tried playing with those two knobs on the
left, but only succeeded in making it more uncomfortable. It gave me a back
ache in less than 30 minutes. Any suggestions?

That's a matter of taste. I don't much care for the seats in my wife's 1999
Forester, but my wife thinks they are much more comfortable than the seats
in my 2003 Infiniti.

I will say that we drove the Forester from the DC area to Utah and back
several years ago, and to Florida and back last month, and I didn't have any
backache problems on either trip. (I'm 69 years old and have been known to
get aches in my back or my neck after long drives. I recall a killer ache
in my neck after a 17-hour solo non-stop drive from Dearborn, MI to Boston
in 1956... I got X-rays after that one. That drive was in a 1955 Ford
sedan.) I have found that setting the seatback more vertical than usual
helps with the ache problem on long drives. You couldn't do that on a 1955
Ford.
 
That's a matter of taste. I don't much care for the seats in my wife's 1999
Forester, but my wife thinks they are much more comfortable than the seats
in my 2003 Infiniti.

I will say that we drove the Forester from the DC area to Utah and back
several years ago, and to Florida and back last month, and I didn't have any
backache problems on either trip. (I'm 69 years old and have been known to
get aches in my back or my neck after long drives. I recall a killer ache
in my neck after a 17-hour solo non-stop drive from Dearborn, MI to Boston
in 1956... I got X-rays after that one. That drive was in a 1955 Ford
sedan.) I have found that setting the seatback more vertical than usual
helps with the ache problem on long drives. You couldn't do that on a 1955
Ford.

My USA 2005 Forester XT is a dream for long distance drives. Last year
I drove from Las Vegas to Lake Tahoe (via Bakersfield -> Sacramento
CA) without the usual backaches I got in my wife's Dodge Caravan on
long drives.
IMHO,the countour of the seats, power adjustments and lumbar & lateral
support made the difference.
 
These occasional complaints that the XT-PP leather seats are "hard" leave me
dumbfounded. If anything, I'd like them slightly firmer (especially the side
bolsters), but that's an extremely small concern. As they are, these seats
are virtually as comfortable as our Volvo's seats (and to many, Volvo is the
gold standard on seat comfort). I'd suggest a ride in a Volkswagen, and then
you could talk about hard seats with more perspective. I can't imagine
having mushy seats that might come from a Buick Le Sabre in a Forester--no
way is that desirable, but that seems to be what some would prefer. I
understand that there's a range of preferences, but it's really hard to
understand those that, IMHO, are beyond reasonable limits one way or the
other.

HW
 
Dick said:
You guys have convinced me that the Forester is ok on the highway (see topic
below). I just drove one, and I agree. It has a vibration between 65 &
80mph, but that's probably a tire or wheel balance problem.

Now, what about the seats. This is a fancy model, with leather seats. I
found it uncomfortably hard. I tried playing with those two knobs on the
left, but only succeeded in making it more uncomfortable. It gave me a back
ache in less than 30 minutes. Any suggestions?

Dick.

It could be that this car just isn't for you. You could replace the
seats, but that's pretty expensive when you're buying a new car.

I got my 2000 Legacy L wagon with cloth seats two months ago. The seats
are the worst feature of the car. I miss my Saab!

It's really a matter of what fits you. One person's pleasure is another
person's agony.
 
After driving an XT-PP for a year, it's not the firmness of the seats that
bothered me but the lack of any useful contouring on the seat bottom and
back. Frankly, it feels like sitting on a church pew, albeit one that goes
to 60mph in less than six seconds!

Our Saab's seats look flatter and softer than the XT's but they're much more
supportive. And our BMW's seats are definitely firmer than the XT's but
they're designed like Recaros and feel much more comfortable in the long
run.

Cheers,

David
 
gundlion said:
After driving an XT-PP for a year, it's not the firmness of the seats that
bothered me but the lack of any useful contouring on the seat bottom and
back. Frankly, it feels like sitting on a church pew, albeit one that goes
to 60mph in less than six seconds!

Our Saab's seats look flatter and softer than the XT's but they're much more
supportive. And our BMW's seats are definitely firmer than the XT's but
they're designed like Recaros and feel much more comfortable in the long
run.

Cheers,

David


Yup. I just moved from a 1995 Saab 9000CS to a 2000 Legacy L wagon.
Ouch. Another thing is that the seat bottom is too level, i.e. I wish I
could tip it back. I don't think this will be my roadtrip car. I might
just rent a minivan if we take a trip.

Tom
 

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