The front headrests are tilted so far forward that they force the head to lean forward when the seat back is in the upright position. This is uncomfortable on a long trip. It also means messed up ladies' hairdos. How can These headrests be adjusted to solve this problem?
I turned my headrests backward. Worked great. In fact, I wonder if the engineers designed them that way but the production guys build them backward???
1) Tilt the seat way back to allow room to remove headrests, 2) Press and hold both headrest release tabs at the same time and have someone else pull out the headrest completely, 3) turn the headrests backward and insert into the two headrest guide slots (headrests fit the same either way). 4) No more pain in the neck !!!
Caution: I do not know what this does for whiplash injury protection but it seems OK for my own comfort with the solution. And it beats the pain in the neck caused by the bass-akwards design.
SOURCE: 1995 Lincoln Continental, passenger seat won't tilt back forward
YOU HAVE A SWITCH OR A TILT ACTUATOR MOTOR PROBLEM. LINCOLNS HAVE 5 OR 6 ELECTRIC MOTORS MOUNTED ON THE UNDERSIDE OF EACH FRONT SEAT WHICH REQUIRES REMOVING THE SEAT TO INSPECT .THEIR ARE ALSO CABLES ATTATCHED TO THESE MOTORS SO LISTEN WHEN YOU HIT THE TILT SWITCH DO YOU HEAR A MOTOR NOISE? IF YOU DO THEN YOU MAY HAVE A BAD CABLE.
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In my Cadillac SRX, the headrests were adjustable. The headrests could tilt forward to accomodate the seatback leaning back. It could also be adjusted back wards so that it did not continuously rub on the back of the head when the seatback was in a straight up position.
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