A power seat in an automobile is a front
seat which can be adjusted by using a switch or joystick and a set of small
electric motors. Most cars with this feature have controls for the driver's
seat only, though almost all luxury cars also have power controls for the front
passenger seat. In addition to fore and aft adjustments, power seats can be
raised or lowered and tilted to suit the comfort of the driver and/or
passenger. Many power seats allow occupants to adjust the seat lumbar or
seatback recline, all at the push of a button or flick of a switch. Cars which
do not have this feature have a lever or bar to provide fore and aft
adjustments.
Fig 1: Power Seat |
Power seats began appearing in automobiles
in the late 1940s. Most early seats were fore-aft only, which saved little
work. The four way power seats showed up in the introduction of the 1955 Ford
Thunderbird allowing fore/aft and up/down controls. A six-way power seat
appeared in the late 1950s. Most power seats in newer cars are either six- or
eight-way.
The earliest form of a "memory"
seat was introduced by Ford Motor Company on two of its 1957 models: the Ford
Thunderbird and the Mercury Turnpike Cruiser. The "Dial-a-Matic" seat
used a letter-and-numerical dial that adjusted the height and either FORE or AFT
of the front seat to the driver's tastes; when the ignition was switched off,
it moved back to the rearmost, lowest position to allow easy exit and entry,
then moved back to the last "dialed" position when the ignition was
started again. The "Dial-a-Matic" seat was dropped after the 1958
model year.
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