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Perfect. Ive seen people cover it up with sheet metal but honestly I think the best look is to smooth everything up, remove the tar, get the cage in, and repaint the entire interior and cage one color.
If you want a clean rear seat delete, just keep your seats in.
The weight of the material that goes into making it clean will just make it the same weight as the foam seats that were in there to begin with.
If you took them out for weight reasons, then there's really no point in mocking up something back there cause it'll end up weighing the same.
;)
I wasn't in a hurry. It is cut straight, the fabric is a bit loose. I'm very pleased with it.
I did it because I put black cloth corbeau seats in the front, which didn't really match my tan vinyl rear seat and there isn't an OEM black cloth seat either. Also, the rear seats in e30s are damn near pointless, and I never need to have anyone back there. This allows for more room than the stock rear seat.
I'm going to be doin this in my next e30 build (after the roll cage goes in). I'm going to be molding a fiberglass insert instead of using plywood. Should be much lighter in the end. I'll be covering it with black marine quality vinyl.
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