I spent the afternoon getting the power seat in my 1955 C-300 to work. Before, it would just click, but not move. I'm sharing my findings and procedure below, but have a question first. Page 201 of the 1955 Chrysler service manual states: "The vertical power unit shaft is equipped with a ball nut and should not be lubricated. The horizontal power unit shaft is equipped with a friction nut that is packed with life-time grease requiring no further lubrication." Additionally there is a gearbox on the horizontal power unit where a small worm gear drives and rotates the worm drive power unit shaft. If that gearbox was also packed with "life-time grease", its life-time is over and the grease is gone, having leaked out and and accumulated on the exterior of the gearbox and assembly and attracted 50 year's worth of dirt and dust bunnies.. Anyone have a recommendation for what kind of grease to pack that little gearbox with? Findings and Procedure: Inoperation was partially due to a buildup of crud on various rotating elements, especially the 3/4" (?) worm gears that position the links and torque rods. With the assemblies removed and the motors direct fed from the battery, nothing would rotate until disassembled, cleaned and lubed. Inoperation was also partially due to one of the two switches not feeding a ground in one position as it should. The ground cable was disconnected from the battery. The front seat bottom can be removed by just lifting it up. Pretty handy! Looks like a plumber's and electrician's nightmare under there, but you don't have to understand the complex mechanical linkage to work on the system. The six wires connected to the switch were tagged and removed. This enabled checking the various switch positions for continuity. One position was dead on the vertical switch, so the seat could not be moved down after being sent all the way up. Jumpering a ground to the relay enabled reversing the motor. It was possible to clean the worm drive power shaft of the vertical unit without removing the power unit by spraying with WD-40 and ragging it off. So only repair of the switch was required Both switch positions worked ok for the vertical power unit and produced relay clicking at the motor but no rotation. The steel and aluminum surround at the driver's side of the seat base was removed by removing four small sheet metal screws holding it to the seat frame. This enabled access to the three screws holding the switch assembly to the surround.. The surround was cleaned and the aluminum polished. The steel part of the surround needed repainting with black enamel, that for another day. The switches are serviceable, sort of. Each of the two switches is held in the chrome pot metal housing by two spring steel clips. I ended up breaking the clips to get the bad switch out of the housing. Once out and cleaned, it became apparent the black plastic switch body was held together with small wire clips that were sort of like big square U-shaped staples. These clips were easy enough to remove and enabled the inside mechanism and contacts to be accessed. One of the sets of contact points had enough erosion and corrosion to prevent electrical contact. Not having any contact cleaner, I just polished all the points with a little brass detailing brush and reassembled the switch using the two wire clips. Much like filing a set of ignition points. Not having replacements for the broken spring steel clips, I just jammed a couple of steel brads into the spaces where the clips would have gone. This seemed to do a good job of securing the switch in the housing. Time will tell how long this crude fix lasts. I removed the vertical power unit after first removing two small snap rings from the mounting pins. This task required a snap-ring tool with tiny points. The relay box was removed after tagging the wires. The relay functions checked out ok. The wires from the switch provide grounds to the relay and cause high-amp hot current to flow to the armature and one or another of the fields of the motor. There are three wires coming from each motor. The two smaller wires are fields, one for each direction. The larger wire is the armature connection. To test the motor, I bolted one field wire to the armature wire and connected these two wires to the Negative (Hot) side of my 6-Volt battery. Then connecting the Positive (ground) side of the battery to the body of the motor. After completely removing the motor from the gearbox, The motor started and ran fine in both directions. (Whew!--what a relief--don't have to go shopping for a motor.). After cleaning the worm drive power rod and the gearbox, they were reassembled to the motor and the system worked fine in both directions with direct power from the battery. There was a large rubber flex coupling between the end of the motor shaft and the small worm gear driving the power rod. I think some of the accumulated crud was surrounding the coupling and preventing rotation . Reassembly went fine. The seat can be levered as needed to allow the power unit to be slipped over the two mounting pins. I WD-40'd the connection points on the linkage and torque levers. Reconnected the battery ground cable and everything worked fine. The motors ran smoothly and quietly. Cleaned and buffed the leather seat base while it was out. Also vacuumed the carpet under the seat. Now that the power seat works, I can install the seat belts I bought last year. I have sure felt naked without them and she-who-must-be-obeyed will not ride in the car without them. One old report on the 1955 Chrysler 300 said the car cornered better than the driver, what with the slick leather seats. Not so bad when you have a steering wheel to hang on to, but there is no panic bar for the passenger to grab. I hope this may be helpful to anyone with inoperative power seats. The bottom line is they are a complex electro-mechanical system, but can be services with simple tools and unskilled labor. I assume they are pretty much the same in later years. Consultations available and criticisms welcomed. C-300'ly, Rich Barber Brentwood 94513 ------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> Has someone you know been affected by illness or disease? Network for Good is THE place to support health awareness efforts! http://us.click.yahoo.com/0xaSZB/UOnJAA/Y3ZIAA/8LmulB/TM --------------------------------------------------------------------~-> To send a message to this group, send an email to: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For list server instructions, go to http://www.chrysler300club.com/yahoolist/inst.htm Yahoo! 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