Stuff We Use: Creepers and Seats

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

On our never-ending quest to improve this place by listening to feedback from the B&B, we are taking a new tack with these product posts, choosing instead to focus on items we have actually used or purchased with our own meagre income. After all, if we’re giving you the truth about cars, we ought to give you the truth about car accessories.


Most of our readers spend untold hours fixing a hooptie, helping a friend with basic car maintenance, or just generally spiffing up their ride. It’s why you’re here – and we’re thankful for it. Here’s our take on a tool we find to be of particular use, especially as most of the TTAC staff begins to age into their fourth decade on this earth.


Floor creepers and wheeled seats can be a godsend for those of us who detest slowly sliding underneath a car or prefer not to drop a squat for 20 minutes whilst polishing those cloudy headlights on an older Ford for the umpteenth time. In other words, they’re not just for old people.

There are no shortage of options floating around places like eBay, such as this old-school blow molded plastic model which has a skiff of padding for yer head and not much else. Some of these types are ultra-low profile, however – so don’t write them off completely if one is constantly doing work on a low-slung coupe. This precise unit darkened this author’s garage for the better part of a decade and was a worthy companion until it finally crumbled after a lifetime worth of work.  


If slotting underneath a vehicle isn’t in the plans, a rolling shop seat may be a better spend of hard-earned money. Look for one with a decently padded cushion (make your juvenile jokes here) and an integrated tray hove between the frame rails. The latter is a key and common component of these seats, extremely useful for those of us who don’t always feel the need to file away each and every tool after extracting a bolt. Yes, there’s merit to that approach but for some jobs this writer finds it preferable having his tools to hand – especially if a maze of differently sized fasteners is causing a headache.

One fantastic feature which has been cropping up in these tray underneath wheeled creeper seats is the addition of magnetization to one of the partitioned trays. This is a boon for catching and keeping fasteners or bolts and the like, keeping them from vanishing right into thin air during reassembly. How many of you lot have stepped on a hubcap containing five lug nuts, causing the blasted things to fly across a garage with sufficient force to dent drywall? Oh, just me? Very good, then.


A third option in this segment is a recent(ish) rise of creepers which can convert from the flat style to a wheeled seat, such as this one. Deployed as a stretcher-style creeper for sliding under cars, it has a padded surface and six wheels. Popping out a cotter pin and rising the top half skyward moves the unit into a ‘Z’ shape, with the padding formerly meant for a mechanic’s head now serving as a cushion for seating. It goes without saying to reinstall that cotter pin in order to keep the whole thing from unfolding itself just as you’re arms deep in a repair or carefully applying that last bit of polishing agent to a set of headlamps. This style of seat was my replacement for the old creeper which bit the dust and, despite initial reservations about too many moving parts, has performed remarkably well.

As planned, this series of posts will continue to focus on items we’ve actually used and bought with our own money. We hope you found this one helpful.


[Images: Sellers]

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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

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  • SCE to AUX SCE to AUX on Sep 05, 2024
    I have that exact creeper seat (red cushion, not blue); I think it was from Harbor Freight. It's great for brake jobs. My flat creeper is an old piece of varnished paneling that I position shiny side up - very thin, easy to slide on, and easy to store.
  • Drnoose Drnoose on Sep 06, 2024
    Creepers are worthless. All they do is require that you jack the car up even higher.
  • Nrd515 As clueless as the car companies seem to be at this point in time, even they know people hate even the idea of subscription service. It's a total, "Nope, not even going to consider this car, you can bite me!" thing with me, and apparently a lot of other people.
  • Calrson Fan I owned a 93 compact Toytota. Bought new after looking at used as the resale value was so stupid high on Toy trucks at the time that new was the only way to go. V6, extended cab & 4WD were the only way to option these small trucks so they had some capability/utility. One optioned like this Mazda is pretty useless.
  • Picard234 I'm not sure I'm going to rush in to trade my Soul for this. Interior does look pretty nice.
  • VoGhost Hmmm, Stellantis is failing and Stellantis has essentially no EVs to sell. Coincidence? I think not.
  • Qwerty shrdlu While I've seen BMWs with what looks like disruptive camoflauge driving around Charleston SC, it seems less like a secret and more "Hey look at me!" Likewise, a lot of spy shots are made by photographers who somehow knew exactly when and where to set up to take the shot.
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