Been there, done that, slid across the bench seat while "zipping" around a corner in a 76 Lincoln Town Car. Ahh...youth
Get some Lexol Leather Cleaner
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Thanks, but I don't have any in my pile 'o cleaners. Would Murphy's Oil Soap be of any value until I can get some Lexol?
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GreyLens New MemberLifetime Supporter
The only real leather cleaner and re-conditioner is :
DIY Leather care
Use their Prestine Clean first to get the other stuff off. If that doesn't work well enough try the stuff Nathan recommends. But then follow-up with their Leather Rejuvenator. It is incredible. Leaves a supple grippy finish because it feeds the leather from the inside out. Incredible stuff. -
Murphy's oil soap? on tack? really!?!?!? I've got to try that. I've always been a saddle soap girl. Works great, and will clean and soften your leather and not make it slippery. A slippery jumping saddle is the last thing you want on a 16 hand Thoroughbred - trust me!
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agranger MINI of the Month June 2009Supporting Member
I've had great luck with the Zaino leather cleaner and conditiner (separate products). MINI leather (pre 06 models) is fairly thin and papery, IMHO... it wears fairly quickly and needs regular conditioning to stay in decent shape.
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I have the English Leather option, at least I think that is what it is called. Anyway, it does not appear to be thin, and in my car at least it still looks really good with minimal care.
Although it is a bit on the slippery side right now. -
KC Jr 54 New Member
I hate ArmorAll with such a passion, and have no idea how they are still in business.... *sigh*
Like Nate said, use the Lexol, for the immediate de-greasing.
Wool-lite mixed with hot/warm water will work well too!
Then follow with the leatherique product. I have spent a couple of hundred dollars on their products, and for damn good reason.
My 03 MCS Leather is far from thin. After 107k miles the leather looks very good, minus a spot on the side bolster on the drivers seat. BUT that happened before i was even introduced to leatherique, and the tear/spot has not gotten any worse since. -
BThayer23 Well-Known Member
Lexol FTW. The owner of the local leather restorer shop came to one of our BMWCCA meetings, and he said Lexol is the only stuff he recommends. I agree 'cause it works.
Also, they make these sponges for glass cooking surfaces - Dobie is the brand name in my supermarket - and they're great for applying leather cleaner. They don't tear up the leather, but you can scrub really hard and get any crap off. My other car has leather panels where you rest your left elbow, and the Dobie + Lexol got hundreds of thousands of miles worth of dirt and sweat off, and now it looks great.
[ame="http://www.amazon.com/3M-Scotch-Brite-720-Purpose-Cleaning/dp/B000VPCG60"]Amazon.com: 3M Scotch-Brite 720 Dobie All Purpose Cleaning Pad: Home Improvement@@AMEPARAM@@http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41A6BBRNh1L.@@AMEPARAM@@41A6BBRNh1L[/ame] -
GreyLens New MemberLifetime Supporter
I'm a Leatherique devotee. It's an interesting product that is a little non-intuitive. Normally, you use the re-conditioner first. Let is soak in for several hours. If you use their method of letting it sit in the sun with windows up for a few hours is brings ALL the dirt out from within the leather fibers. Then you use the cleaner to take away all that muck. I've used it three times on my two year old 2009 JCW leather. I've also seen it used on some really old stuff and their website shows the effects on old white leather as well. Great stuff.
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Jim -
Murphy's is good but take your time and go easy. The wife got a bit carried away with it in the rear seat of her BMW, while removing a stain she manage to create a lighter area/spot. A lot of oiling and time has toned it down but it is still there....
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Jim -
I gave the driver's a quick clean with the Murphy's and it is much better, thanks. However, I think I might as well go and get some Lexol and give it a proper and safe cleaning.
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Minidave Well-Known MemberLifetime Supporter
Being an English car afficianado, I use this.....
I figure why not use the stuff the originators of fine English leather interiors recommend?
Years ago I sold an older Jag to an young enthusiast - the leather was cracked, dried and so stiff it felt like steel. He spent the next 6 weeks lathering on the Hide Food and letting it soak in. At the end of that time the interior looked brand new - the leather was glove soft, most of the cracks had swelled shut and were almost invisible - it was an unbelievable transformation! -
LOL ... we have some big ones too, including my 19.1h Percheron. --> Full Court Farm | Hunter/Jumper Breeding, Training, and Sales
We always just used neatsfoot oil for most everything ... it works wonders on my wife's Beval. For stuff in really bad shape, we've had good results with Leather Therapy. -
Redbeard JCW: because fast is fun!Supporting Member
Dumb question since this leather treatment thread is going:
I have "leatherette" (i.e. Fake Leather) interior. Is it just a synthetic that I can clean with normal plastic/vinyl cleaning products or should I still treat it like leather and clean/treat it accordingly? -
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