{\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\deff0\deftab720{\fonttbl{\f0\fswiss MS Sans Serif;}{\f1\froman\fcharset2 Symbol;}{\f2\froman Times New Roman;}} {\colortbl\red0\green0\blue0;} \deflang1033\horzdoc{\*\fchars }{\*\lchars }\pard\plain\f2\fs20 I'm building one for my 95 - it's actually quite easy. I'll tell you how to do it on a coupe.\ \ Pull all the seat out (which you've done) and seat belts if you desire. Trace the outline of the seat back and seat botom onto some cardboard. \ \ Cut it out - maybe leave a little extra on the sides in case you traced to far inside. Not cut slits about 3-4" long and about an inch apart all along the sides. Place teh "template" in the car. The reason for the slits is so you can easily bend the cardboard to fit perfectly. Then take some scissors and cut the bends.\ \ When you are finished, you should have a template that fits the car perfectly. Now go to Home Depot.\ \ HD sells the fiberboard like the thing that covers your spare tire well. It's around $5 for a 4'x8' sheet - very cheap. Trace the cardboard outline onto the fiberboard and cut it out with a jig saw/saber saw. It cuts REAL easy.\ \ Put it in the car, mark any needed changes, and cut again. Do this until you have a nice fit. While at HD, I picked up some plastic caps that have a hinged lid. I will use those on some pan head screws and flip the covers over - they'll hardly e noticeable. That's how I will mount the boards.\ \ I haven't found any carpet yet though - autozone USED to sell it, but they don't now.\ \ Also, If you plan on hauling stuff (slicks, briefcase, etc.) you may want to cut some 2x4 or someting as reinforcements under the seat bottom.\ \ Skyler - it's loud as hell with no back seat in huh!! LOL. The fiber board actually kills the sound pretty well though. I was surprised. \par }