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•I never knew about that inherent natural barrier.Good, at least I can still read. It's actually the part about the coating that made me nervous.
Leather itself has an inherent natural barrier, which as long as it's kept up with conditioners should last for a long long time.
I would rather not be included as one that agrees with your above, seemingly all-encompassing statement.I think we can all agree that the quality of the leather has EVERYTHING to do with how the leather wears.
I would rather not be included as one that agrees with your above, seemingly all-encompassing statement.
TO WIT:
What if it's "coated/protected" leather?
Then:
Wouldn't the quality (and maintenance) of this top-coating have everything to do with how the top-coating wears---not the underlying, (and thusly coated/protected), leather itself?
Bob
I wouldn't know.Cheap leather is still cheap leather...
99.1% (or there about) of automotive cabin-leather is "coated" with some type/grade of a urethane.You can tell. The Leather in a early Hyundai is not as nice as say a Benz.
•IMHO:I don't think leatherette would need to be coated since it's a man made material.
^^^Kinda my point all along.^^^lLeather is coated to preserve it.
^^^ :dunno: ..."full circle"? ^^^Bob, I hope you're f*cking with me!
Using your above analogy, then;Wouldn't the leatherette be designed with a coating, so technically it's not a coating, it's just as designed![]()
You can tell. The Leather in a early Hyundai is not as nice as say a Benz.
Time to ditch this or any other leather conditioners!!I got the leather cleaner and conditioner........dislike the fact that it leaves a greasy feeling when someone sits on it.