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Here's an idea. If the backs of your seats are made with the same leather and color, test a spot back there using the same OPC at 3:1. Most likely, that section of leather hasn't been nearly affected by dirt, sweat, and other grime. If you don't see blotches, it's probably safe to say that what you were seeing on the fronts of your seats was dirt being removed. Or, if you have a headrest, see if you can remove it and compare the back of it, where no oils from your hair have dirtied it, to the color of the front of your seats. I'm sure to the naked eye, your front and rear seats look uniform, but if you could put them side by side, you'd see the rear seats were much cleaner (assuming you don't haul people/animals around all the time).
Mark
ill try opc 3:1 next week on leather seats. i highly doubt it will stain. i bet it will clean the seats greatly!
pretty interesting how 8 pages in the majority is siding with the idea that the leather is not damaged, just dirty, while the "leather pros" are stating otherwise. I'm not really sure who to believe but I suppose it's worth giving OPC another shot. I'll use it on an unnoticeable area and will post results. Is it best to use a mf towel or a brush (I have both)?
Judy and Roger, as the rest of the members on this forum know, Corey (CEEDOG) is a very objective reviewer. If he is willing to, how about you both send him samples of your products, and he can put them to the test against OPC on some dirty leather. He can do some spray and drip tests and we can see what happens. This ought to stop speculation and give us an answer based on facts.