Marine grade vinyl, Dan Tack foam adhesive, high density 1" thick upholstery foam and small motorcycle gel pad. All off ebay.
Seat is stitched front and back. Done by my wife on a regular sewing machine. Stapled with a cheap hand stapler that takes Arrow JT21 1/4" staples.
If I had to do it again, I would not have built up the 2nd layer of 1" foam. One layer with the Vespa top would have been plenty. The gel pad over the high part of the pan really helps.
I never cared for the shape of the stock seat at the front and the rear. I built the front out with the piece I cut off the top of the horn. I built the rear up and flattened it out. Materials were pretty cheap. The glue is the same thing as 3M super 74 at about 1/3 the cost. I used a bread knife, 4" grinder with an 80 grit sanding disc and a drywall rasp to shape it.
Thanks wallboard....really nice job!
If you would ,please take photos of front and rear seams to show us your work, and an underside shot to show the stapling.
What do you think of the ride, now?
It took me awhile to get used to sitting so high.....but I think I'm a bigger guy than you - so, I wouldn't remove a mm of my foam! At 6'3" I still can be flat-footed at a stop light with my heels on the ground. Another benefit is - I've slowed the search for better rear shocks since doing the seat - the ride is so much better than stock for me. Some day I may take the seat to a motorcycle ulpholsterer to have a pro-seat cover sewn on. That shouldn't be too expensive _ and if it's snowing they might be glad for the work.
I cut away a lot of the nose, and added rebond foam (very firm stuff) to the nose - so I wouldn't have a tendancy to slide forward - and to the rear, so it feels like a small butt-back area to sit against. And with my size, there was no thought of trying to keep this a 2 person seat - never intended to take a passenger, then or now.
Good job - and thanks for sharing pics and info!
Stig