It's essentially the same, minus the electrical. There are similar plastic covers in the front that clip off. Once the bolts underneath are removed, the 2nd row can be slid forward. Remove the plastic covers in the rear, and there should be 2 bolts per cover, IIRC (6 in total for the rear). I found these were on pretty tight, and I needed a breaker bar to put on my socket and extension, but thereafter it was fine. Good luck!
Baz , the Passenger side bottom has the Air Bag sensors . Yellow is Airbag Wire and Connector Color When You remove any late model car seat, Never turn ignition on or Put power to the wires
Is it the same for the front passenger seat?
Yes, same procedure
How do you remove the middle row
Yeah, that's my question, too!
It's essentially the same, minus the electrical. There are similar plastic covers in the front that clip off. Once the bolts underneath are removed, the 2nd row can be slid forward. Remove the plastic covers in the rear, and there should be 2 bolts per cover, IIRC (6 in total for the rear). I found these were on pretty tight, and I needed a breaker bar to put on my socket and extension, but thereafter it was fine. Good luck!
Has anyone had any issues with the airbag and weight sensor circuits after doing this? Should the fuse be removed before uncoupling the harness?
Baz , the Passenger side bottom has the Air Bag sensors . Yellow is Airbag Wire and Connector Color
When You remove any late model car seat, Never turn ignition on or Put power to the wires
remove the negative battery terminal
@@hotrodupholstery-com3348 So you couldn't leave the seat out for any length of time to do repairs, and still use the car?
Constructiongal827 Once seat is removed , don’t turn on ignition .
@@hotrodupholstery-com3348 on the Toyota nation forums, people say they've left them out with no issue. I'm about to find out :: crosses fingers ::
What about the seat belt?
Seatbelt isn't connected to the seat
@@ChickenSDS Mine is.