I assume because you put conditioner in quotations you know that conditioning coated leather is pointless.
I just use PERL on leather after I have cleaned it. And it looks fantastic.
At what dilution?
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I assume because you put conditioner in quotations you know that conditioning coated leather is pointless.
I just use PERL on leather after I have cleaned it. And it looks fantastic.
1:5At what dilution?
I have a problem with the beige leather on a hyundai santa fe, there is some blue jeans transfer on both front seats. I cant seem to get it off tried leather cleaner, APC, castrol super clean and my last resort is the mr clean magic eraser! what should i do ?
Ben, the answer is to put your belief in your experience as a detailer. You are the one making the assessment of a car's leather, it's environment, frequency of care, and how it responds to your style of treatment. When it's in your hands, you are the car's care-giver and as such you are in the best position to decide what's going to work.hmm who to believe...
Both of your answers sound intelligent. But Judy is a leather consultant....
hmm who to believe...
Both of your answers sound intelligent. But Judy is a leather consultant....
Years ago I brought some junkyard seats back to life with lexol cleaner and conditioner. They worked great on those seats ('94 Ford). Lexol cleaner is a very mild soap. Regardless of the different opinions on the conditioner, the cleaner is good to have on hand. It doesn't cost much, lasts a long time when you dilute it properly, and I can't recall anybody ever saying it's not safe.So products like lexol cleaner and conditioner aren't worth buying. All you need us an apc and a protectant like 303?
Judy Bass works for LTT Leather Care in the UK. This company sells LTT branded leather care products.
There is a constant debate on leather care. I think everyone agrees keep it clean and keep it protected. The debate is on the chemistry of the protection products (lanolin, animal fats, other oils. etc). It is clear that even products with oils (does not negate they are still water based products) act as a barrier.