The 99 has two bolts holding the lower rear seat cushion. They are in the front in plain sight. I'm not sure of the upper cushion.
If the seat back tilts forward as in a 2 door car you should be able to take the back off at the hinge. If it is solid, then the frame of the seat is welded together. The fabric can be removed and replaced but not the entire back.
Under the rear seat. Open the rear from the rear. Reach in from the middle back of the seat between the two seat belt latches and pull it up.
The back seat on a Ford F150 FX4 can be removed by locating the straps in the back part of the seat. Pull up on the straps to remove the seat.
Yes
You need to remove the rear seat before you can removed the front. First removed the one screw on the back of the rear seat then removed the two screws on the front of the rear seat. You can not get to the front screws until you remove the rear screw.
It is behind the rear seat back. The seat has to be removed to access.
To remove the back seat on a 1989 Ford Thunderbird, the first step is to remove the back of the seat. The back is held in by bolts on each side. After the back is removed, the seat area should come out after removing the floor bolts.
To remove the back seat from a 1997 Honda Odyssey the seat locks need to be opened. When the clips are unlocked the seat will be able to be lifted up and removed from the vehicle.
Rr
Push down and back on the front edge of seat, 1st on left side then on right side. Then pull entire seat section up and out.
Should be 1 bolt in each corner
The bench seat back on a 1989 GMC uses an inertial locking system which automatically locks the seat back upon sudden deceleration. The latches are located on the pivot assembly on each end of the full seat back. I found that my seat back would not unlatch because a piece of rope had been pinched between the latch and the latch frame. To unlock the seat, I removed the pivot bolt by exposing it from the outboard seat upholstery (simply lift the upholstery to locate the pivot bolt and remove the bolt with a 5/8 inch socket wrench. Once the pivot bolt was removed, the seat back could be pulled forward and the offending rope was removed. Replacing the pivot bolt restored the seat back to normal operation.