atrey
Member
91% isopropyl alcohol and a clean microfiber should do the trickAny idea on how to remove this? I have no clue where it's from. Tried baby wipes, and water on a towel so far.
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91% isopropyl alcohol and a clean microfiber should do the trickAny idea on how to remove this? I have no clue where it's from. Tried baby wipes, and water on a towel so far.
Just tried it, unfortunately didn't work.91% isopropyl alcohol and a clean microfiber should do the trick
How often do you reapply them?Did you ever get the stain out OP?
I’d recommend ceramic coaching your seats. I used Gyeon Q2 Leathershield a year ago (takes 20 minutes to apply) and have had no stains (I wear jeans everyday and haul around small, often dirty kids).
Once a year. I just re-did mine with another coat. One bottle should get you about 3-4 coats.How often do you reapply them?
As I understand it, and I might be mistaken, is that the trick is generally to try and get rid of the stains as soon as possible with baby wipes etc. If you just layer more and more dye on top of it, because you basically never clean them or do it infrequently enough that it is left to sit on the seats with whatever sun etc is out there "curing" it, then it gets harder or perhaps even impossible to remove.The white seats are such a mystery. Lost of posters say baby wipes take care of everything and still look new and then you see threads and photos where owners can't remove stains. Looks like denim transfer but I'm not sure why your seats won't clean when other people say theirs are easily cleaned.
Wish Tesla would cover it under warranty warranty since Its still new. Never knew that the white was this much maintenance heavyAs I understand it, and I might be mistaken, is that the trick is generally to try and get rid of the stains as soon as possible with baby wipes etc. If you just layer more and more dye on top of it, because you basically never clean them or do it infrequently enough that it is left to sit on the seats with whatever sun etc is out there "curing" it, then it gets harder or perhaps even impossible to remove.
There doesn't seem to be any logic otherwise to why some people have no problems at all just using baby wipes, and the OP can't shift this stuff with a whole host of cleaning fluids.
Thank you for the suggestions! Unfortunately however the stains still didn’t come off with simple green. I’ll ask the detailer that is coming over on Friday.I once had a stubborn stain on my white leather seats. A diluted solution of 50% Simple Green and 50% water got the stain out. I would spray a small test area on your seat with this solution. Let it dwell for a minute or two, then gently rub it with a microfiber towel.
Good luck!