Page 17 of 340

Downloaded from www.Manualslib.com manuals search engine Rear Seats 
Bucket  Seats 
If  you have rear bucket  seats in your vehicle,  they will recline and adjust  the 
same  way as the  front  manual  bucket  seats. See “Front Seats” earlier 
in this 
section  or  in the Index. 
Bench  Seats 
If  you  have  bench  seats in  your  vehicle,  each seat can  carry  up  to three 
passengers.  They  can also be removed  to increase storage  space. 
The  center  and  rear  bench  seats can be adjusted  forward or rearward  by the 
lever  at the  front 
of the seat. 
Slide the lever at the 
front  of the  seat  to  the 
right  to  unlock 
it. 
Slide  the seat  to  where 
you  want  it. Then 
release  the lever  and 
try  to  move  the seat 
with your  body,  to 
make  sure 
the seat is 
locked  into place. 
The  non-touring  center bench seat has a pivoting  right armrest.  The left 
armrest  can also be  used  as  a storage compartment, 
The  storage compartment  and beverage cooler can  also 
be used  as  rear  seat 
armrests. See “Storage  CompartmentBeverage  Cooler” in the  Index. 
The  optional touring  bench seats come 
with moveable  armrests, individual 
reclining seatbacks, adjustable headrests 
and a  fold  down  center console. 
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        Page 18 of 340
Downloaded from www.Manualslib.com manuals search engine To adjust your 
seatback,  pull  up on 
the lever  on  the  lower 
outside  of the  seat. 
The  center  bench 
seatbacks  will  recline 
further  back  than  the 
rear  bench  seatbacks. 
To  raise  or lower  the 
center  console,  press 
the  button  between  the 
beverage  holders. 
Only  sit  in  the  center 
seating  position  when 
the  console  is in  an 
upright  position.  For 
details  about 
headrests,  see “Head 
Restraints”  in this 
section. 
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        Page 19 of 340
Downloaded from www.Manualslib.com manuals search engine Seatback  Latches  (Non-Touring  Bench  Seats) 
To fold your 
non-touring  seatback 
forward,  pull  up  on 
the  latch release lever 
while  pulling  the 
seatback  toward  you. 
The  lever  is on  the 
right  rear of your  seat. 
After  the latch  has  been  released,  push the seatback  down until it  locks  in 
place.  To raise the seatback,  unlock the seat  by  pushing  forward on the 
lever.  Make sure the seatback 
is locked  when it is  put  back  in  the upright 
position. 
Removable  Seats  (Touring  and  Non-Touring  Bench  Seats) 
To Remove The Seat 
1. Disconnect the quick release latch plates  for the  lapshoulder  belt from 
the  buckles  in the  roof. 
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Downloaded from www.Manualslib.com manuals search engine [ TO  DETACH  
I BELTFOR  
I SEAT  REMOVAL 
2. If  you are 
removing  the 
center  seat, 
remove  the  right 
lapshoulder  belt. 
To do this, press 
the  tip of a key 
into the release 
hole  of the safety 
belt  attachment 
while  pulling  up 
on  the  safety  belt. 
3. If  you  have a 
safety  belt  guide 
on  your  seat, pull 
the  safety  belt  all 
the  way  out 
through  the 
guide. 
H 4. Pullup  on the 
seatback  latch on 
the  right  rear  of 
the  front seat. 
Push  the  seatback 
down  until  it 
locks  in  place 
(non-touring 
bench  seats  only). 
5. Lift up on the seat  release  latch.  The latches  are  near  the floor on the 
rear  legs  of the  seat.  To relieve  pressure  on  the  latch, pull  back 
on the 
seat. 
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        Page 21 of 340
Downloaded from www.Manualslib.com manuals search engine 6. Lift up on the 
rear  of the  seat to 
remove  the  seat 
assembly 
from 
the rear latch 
pins.  Then,  pull 
back  and  lift the 
seat out  of  the 
vehicle. 
To Install The Seat 
‘f .: ..: . 
I 
1. Lower  the  seat 
into  position. 
Make  sure the 
front  retainers  are 
hooked  onto  the 
anchor  pins.  111 
the  seat  down  to 
latch  the  rear 
retainers. 
Make  sure  the  seat 
is locked  in  by  pulling  up  and  down  on  the  seat. 
2. Raise  the  seatback  by 
pushing  forward 
on the  latch  at  the 
right  rear 
of the 
seat. 
Pull  up on 
the  seatback  until 
it  is  locked 
securely  in  the  up 
position. 
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        Page 22 of 340

Downloaded from www.Manualslib.com manuals search engine 3. Attach the quick  release latch  plate to the  buckles in the roof. If you are 
installing the center seat, connect  the  right lapshoulder  belt to the 
attachment  on the seat  cushion.  If  you have a safety  belt  guide on  your 
seat,  pull the belt  through  the guide  before  reattaching  the lapshoulder 
belt  to  the side  of the  seat.  The release  hole  should  be facing outward. 
If  you  installed  the safety  belt  with  the release hole  facing  inward 
(toward the seat), slide the  plastic cover up 
so you  can  see the buckle. 
Disconnect  the  seat belt. Slide the  cover  back  down  and  reinstall the 
belt  correctly. 
NOTICE: 
Be  sure  to  put  the  correct  seats  back in the  proper  positions so 
the  safety  belts  will  work  properly. 
Head Restraints 
If your  vehicle  has  the  optional touring  package,  you  have  adjustable  head 
restraints. 
3 
Slide  the  head 
restraint  up or down 
so that  the  top of the 
restraint is closest to 
the  top  of your  ears. 
This  position  reduces 
the  chances 
of a  neck 
injury  in  a crash.   
         
        
        
     
        
        Page 23 of 340
Downloaded from www.Manualslib.com manuals search engine Safety  Belts:  They’re For Everyone 
This part of the manual  tells you  how  to  use safety  belts properly.  It also 
tells  you some  things  you  should not do with  safety  belts. 
And  it explains the Supplemental Inflatable Restraint, 
or “air  bag”  system. 
This  figure  lights up  as a reminder to buckle up. (See  “Safety Belt Reminder 
Light”  in the  Index.) 
In many  states and Canadian provinces, the  law says to  wear safety belts. 
Here’s  why: 
They work. 
You  never  know  if  you’ll  be in a crash. If you  do have  a crash,  you  don’t 
know 
if it  will be a  bad one. 
A  few  crashes are mild,  and some crashes can be 
so serious that  even 
buckled up a person  wouldn’t survive. But  most  crashes are  in between. 
In 
many  of  them, people  who buckle  up can survive and sometimes  walk  away. 
Without  belts they could have  been  badly  hurt  or killed. 
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Downloaded from www.Manualslib.com manuals search engine After  more  than 25 years  of  safety  belts in vehicles,  the facts are clear.  In 
most crashes  buckling up does  matter ... a lot! 
Why  Safety Belts Work 
When you ride in or on anything, you go as fast  as  it  goes. 
For  example,  if  the 
bike  is  going 
10 mph 
(16 km/h), so is  the 
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