Thanks.
Last thing first, I don’t remember the pivot points being adjustable, but that would only affect the rotation of the armrest on the bolt. My problem is the armrest is bent downwards along the center line of the bolt. So that’s not a solution.
So, I went outside and did a big inspection. The armrest has about an inch of rattle/play up and down at the far side by the passenger seat. I didn’t use a tape measure, but I believe it’s down about an inch and a half on the passenger side of the armrest.
When I was checking out the seat, at the top, the whole driver seat seems to be leaning towards the driver‘s window about one to one and an half inches plus or minus. When I swapped the seats, there was no damage or rust to the cab where it bolts to the floor, and I didn’t notice anything wrong with the seat. But I’m thinking I’m going to unbolt it on the window side, put in some shim blocks to get it level, and use some longer bolts. The foam seat pad was worn down on the outside, which I wish I had fixed at the time, but it didn’t seem like the seat frame was bent.
The problem with that is, is that it will turn the armrest further down on the passenger side.
I hadn’t considered that the seat frame inside the seat might be bent out of shape by the armrest and bent over. That actually makes sense now. My ‘97 is also tilted down. I know what you’re saying, that if I just thread a long bolt in there, and I try to pick up on it to straight out the armrest, it may destroy the threads or damage the side of the seat. So check my thinking on this.
i’m thinking of making a steel lever. I’d make it two or 3 feet long to get plenty of leverage but under good control. I’d use something like a piece of an 1-1/2 x 1/4 angle iron. On the seat end, I would weld a flat plate and drill a hole through it to hold the armrest bolt. I’d make that piece of flat out of something pretty strong, like quarter inch steel. I’d drill the hole and weld it to the lever so the hole was two or 3 inches below the center line of the lever. Think of the claw on a hammer, one of the claws that’s fairly straight, not the hook.
Then I’m thinking that if I bolt that to the seat, drilling the hole and using a bolt where there’s no play, I could then carefully bend it upward. The concept is that the pressure point would be at the end of the lever above the hole, and with the hole located below that, the energy would be trying to pull the bolt out, not bend the bolt hole up. With a high point of contact, it should push that spot in and pull the bolt spot out.
Am I nuts? Wait, scratch that. Do you think that would work?
I’m thinking that if I bust it apart, I can still drive the truck without the armrest for a little while. I could either get a scrapyard replacement seat, or just take that seat apart and weld it up solidly, with a much sturdier mounting point for the armrest. It wouldn’t break my heart if I replaced that fanny foam at the same time.
What am I missing?