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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Show'n'Shine Saloon
Brake fluid on leather seats....can it be 'repaired'?
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<blockquote data-quote="Dennis1417" data-source="post: 14081189" data-attributes="member: 27222"><p>I have used standard leather cleaner and conditioner on it which appears to do nothing but put a glaze of shine on top of it. I watched some leather cleaning videos and several showed people using bathroom cleaner (Scrubbing Bubbles) to 'strip' the seat of all oil/dirt, and then you're supposed to condition it after. Well I did this and all it seemed to do was eat the black finish off my seats. I know this because my towels were turning black. :shrug: Needless to say I won't be doing that anymore.</p><p></p><p>Here's a picture of the damage. When I remove the corn starch from the seat, it looks like a darker black than the seat (oily, as if it is indeed drawing the oil to the surface). When I take a towel to it and <em>dry</em> it up, it looks like this.</p><p>[ATTACH]12349[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dennis1417, post: 14081189, member: 27222"] I have used standard leather cleaner and conditioner on it which appears to do nothing but put a glaze of shine on top of it. I watched some leather cleaning videos and several showed people using bathroom cleaner (Scrubbing Bubbles) to 'strip' the seat of all oil/dirt, and then you're supposed to condition it after. Well I did this and all it seemed to do was eat the black finish off my seats. I know this because my towels were turning black. :shrug: Needless to say I won't be doing that anymore. Here's a picture of the damage. When I remove the corn starch from the seat, it looks like a darker black than the seat (oily, as if it is indeed drawing the oil to the surface). When I take a towel to it and [I]dry[/I] it up, it looks like this. [ATTACH]12349.vB[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Show'n'Shine Saloon
Brake fluid on leather seats....can it be 'repaired'?
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