Leather Care
#31
Rennlist Member
On the 928 forum, many have had great results restoring leather seats using Nivea cream - but it must be the German formula, not the US formula. Here is a thread on it (the guys swear by this): https://rennlist.com/forums/928-foru...a-results.html
#32
Rennlist Member
Edits- yes, I do see the pin holes looking again, but the bolster is smooth
#33
Rennlist Member
Yes, but most report that the holes open up after a day, or apply the product to a rag first to avoid the problem altogether. Also, I imagine that just about all leather care products will initially block the holes. In the OP's car, though, there don't appear to be the pin holes.
Edits- yes, I do see the pin holes looking again, but the bolster is smooth
Edits- yes, I do see the pin holes looking again, but the bolster is smooth
I think it all comes down to how badly worn your seats are. Lexol is great for maintaining leather and keeping it nice. If you're trying to bring badly neglected leather back, Lexol probably is not going to get the job done.
#34
Not in MA anymore
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Leather Masters -
Wicked good
No affiliation
Matt
Wicked good
No affiliation
Matt
#35
Rennlist Member
Leatherique doesn't block the vent holes, in fact the holes help the product absorb into the leather. Leatherique is a liquid that is about the consistency of 0W oil. It just soaks in.
#38
Rennlist Member
see pics below. Put the oil on at night and left the car on the street to steam in 90+ heat the following day. Early in the morning I reapplies additional oil cc side the seats had absorbed some. That evening when the heat subsided I checked and applied yet some more oil to the seats as there were some parts that had fully absorbed. left for another full day of heat and then applied the pristene clean and buffed them dry.
overall very pleased. It returned the matte supple finish you expect from new factory seats. It didn’t reduce creasing but the hide feels much more pliable now and it does not feel like it will get any worse. The seats were quite shiny before but now have a nice matte sheen. Will probably clean em up a bit more.
one thing I would mention is that it has completely resolved all leather squeaks in the cabin and has transformed the ride comfort experience. My wife, who generally frowns when we take my car because she finds it uncomfortable, said that the improvement was so dramatic that it solved a lot of why she hated riding in the car! Win! For that reason alone (more the squeak fix and less the wife appeasing ) I found it to be totally worth the process as I absolutely hate any rattles and squeaks.
my car has just over 75k miles on the seats as a reference point.
Drivers side buffed off, passenger side still with rejuvenator oil applied
Both sides buffed
overall very pleased. It returned the matte supple finish you expect from new factory seats. It didn’t reduce creasing but the hide feels much more pliable now and it does not feel like it will get any worse. The seats were quite shiny before but now have a nice matte sheen. Will probably clean em up a bit more.
one thing I would mention is that it has completely resolved all leather squeaks in the cabin and has transformed the ride comfort experience. My wife, who generally frowns when we take my car because she finds it uncomfortable, said that the improvement was so dramatic that it solved a lot of why she hated riding in the car! Win! For that reason alone (more the squeak fix and less the wife appeasing ) I found it to be totally worth the process as I absolutely hate any rattles and squeaks.
my car has just over 75k miles on the seats as a reference point.
Drivers side buffed off, passenger side still with rejuvenator oil applied
Both sides buffed
The following users liked this post:
Ironman88 (06-12-2020)
#39
Three Wheelin'
Thread Starter
Thanks for all the comments. I actually have a few products on the way so if one works better than another I will let you know. I live in south Texas so the days are now reaching 100 and I wish I had vented seats. Cheers.
#40
Rennlist Member
Viscosity of Leatherique Batches
I was using Leatherique on my cars for years and it used to be fairly runny...like the consistency of half and half or maybe cream. I loved it. I would get it one my hands then when I would rinse my hands under water they felt like baby skin.
Then I bought two more quarts of it and it was a LOT thicker. I applied it to my leather sofa and it became a mess...removing some of the color because it just would not come off. I'm still pissed. It didn't react that way in my car but still the smell and feel changed. They had zero explanation for it.
Was yours kind of thicker?
Then I bought two more quarts of it and it was a LOT thicker. I applied it to my leather sofa and it became a mess...removing some of the color because it just would not come off. I'm still pissed. It didn't react that way in my car but still the smell and feel changed. They had zero explanation for it.
Was yours kind of thicker?
I have been using Leatherique for about 16 years, using a bottle up about every three and all of the bottles, purchased one at a time, have had the same viscosity-"like half and half.."
I would contact the manufacturer regarding your problem as it sounds like you may have a bad batch.
#41
Rennlist Member
see pics below. Put the oil on at night and left the car on the street to steam in 90+ heat the following day. Early in the morning I reapplies additional oil cc side the seats had absorbed some. That evening when the heat subsided I checked and applied yet some more oil to the seats as there were some parts that had fully absorbed. left for another full day of heat and then applied the pristene clean and buffed them dry.
overall very pleased. It returned the matte supple finish you expect from new factory seats. It didn’t reduce creasing but the hide feels much more pliable now and it does not feel like it will get any worse. The seats were quite shiny before but now have a nice matte sheen. Will probably clean em up a bit more.
one thing I would mention is that it has completely resolved all leather squeaks in the cabin and has transformed the ride comfort experience. My wife, who generally frowns when we take my car because she finds it uncomfortable, said that the improvement was so dramatic that it solved a lot of why she hated riding in the car! Win! For that reason alone (more the squeak fix and less the wife appeasing ) I found it to be totally worth the process as I absolutely hate any rattles and squeaks.
my car has just over 75k miles on the seats as a reference point.
Drivers side buffed off, passenger side still with rejuvenator oil applied
Both sides buffed
overall very pleased. It returned the matte supple finish you expect from new factory seats. It didn’t reduce creasing but the hide feels much more pliable now and it does not feel like it will get any worse. The seats were quite shiny before but now have a nice matte sheen. Will probably clean em up a bit more.
one thing I would mention is that it has completely resolved all leather squeaks in the cabin and has transformed the ride comfort experience. My wife, who generally frowns when we take my car because she finds it uncomfortable, said that the improvement was so dramatic that it solved a lot of why she hated riding in the car! Win! For that reason alone (more the squeak fix and less the wife appeasing ) I found it to be totally worth the process as I absolutely hate any rattles and squeaks.
my car has just over 75k miles on the seats as a reference point.
Drivers side buffed off, passenger side still with rejuvenator oil applied
Both sides buffed
Thx!
Bob
#42
Drifting
Leatherique is wonderful stuff. I use it on my natural leather interior and it looks like new after almost 90k miles.
Leatherique doesn't block the holes in perforated leather. The only danger with the stuff is that you apply it liberally and you may soak the underlying material if you have perforations. It doesn't harm the leather in any way--i just foresee having difficulty cleaning it all up with perforated leather.
As for the OP, no cleaner or conditioner is going to fix that bolster. He's going to have to use a product with a dye to make the cracked finish blend in. My only suggestions there are to make sure the colored product works with whatever conditioner and/or cleaner that you use. Leatherique does make products for coloring leather.
Leatherique doesn't block the holes in perforated leather. The only danger with the stuff is that you apply it liberally and you may soak the underlying material if you have perforations. It doesn't harm the leather in any way--i just foresee having difficulty cleaning it all up with perforated leather.
As for the OP, no cleaner or conditioner is going to fix that bolster. He's going to have to use a product with a dye to make the cracked finish blend in. My only suggestions there are to make sure the colored product works with whatever conditioner and/or cleaner that you use. Leatherique does make products for coloring leather.
The following users liked this post:
VT Blue (08-18-2020)
#44
Drifting
it's actually "Prestine", but don't ask me where they came up with that spelling.
Maybe it is a mash-up between PREServation and prisTINE, but if it is, thats pretty obscure.
Even with the weird name, its a great product.
Maybe it is a mash-up between PREServation and prisTINE, but if it is, thats pretty obscure.
Even with the weird name, its a great product.
Last edited by Iceter; 08-17-2020 at 04:36 PM.
The following users liked this post:
VT Blue (08-18-2020)
#45
Rennlist Member