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Cleaning interior plastics
Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 10:21 pm
by excursion
What do you chaps use on the interior plastics?
I don't want to use back to black or other silicone products as they make it look shiney and cheap.
Mark

Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 7:25 am
by kiwi_mtm
i have the same question. Also something that will take the light grim off too.
Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 11:13 am
by JJRS4
damp cloth with little dishwshing liquid then rinse with wet cloth then QUICKLY dry it off.
Posted: Fri May 28, 2004 11:48 pm
by romario
I use Zymol's Clear product, in a very weak solution applied with a cloth. Then after that has dried and plastics been in the sun at least 15 minutes I use Zymol Vinyl which you must apply in modest amounts or the car's plastics will go too shiny for my tastes. Once finished I the pass a damp cloth over the treated plastics again. Sounds OTT but in practice the products are so good you don't do it best often.
I use
www.vertar.com in the UK to supply Zymol, or buy loads in one shot and get it delivered to a local USA address if I'm across the pond.
Posted: Mon May 31, 2004 7:07 pm
by Golich
Armoral or something like that. I doesn't leave the dash too shiney. Like that horrible back to black or cockpit shine. It's just the right amount of polish. Not sure if it has silicone, but it works a treat on most things rubber etc. I don't put it on glass. Although I'm not sure what it would do? I've used if for years on cars and motorbike plastics. Halfords sell it.
Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2004 3:17 am
by Bushy
Meguiars Natural Shine, one coat gives it showroom finish, a second gives the shine if you want it
http://www.extremecarcare.co.uk/meguiars.asp?cat=cint
Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2004 10:21 am
by excursion
Cheers guys

Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2004 11:06 am
by Bushy
better send you a free bottle mate seeing as the probelms I have had with brake discs
Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2004 12:13 pm
by excursion
Yeah what is happening?