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I'm in the market and have a teenager that plays soccer. How is your white interior holding up? Is it easy to clean and maintain?
Damn: I thought i had a lot with 10,000 since that time.Mine is holding up great, 16000 miles since August 2019.
ditto - 4yo and 6yo. I did put a protector pad under the carseat/booster to prevent pinching and stress marks, but the seats are holding perfectly like new. Most visible issue is jeans transfer. Baby wipes every so often and i have a degreaser & cleaner i've never used stillAlmost a year old. 17k miles, have a 6 year old. I wipe the seats down about once every 2-3 months with baby wipes. Everything looks new. Hardest thing to get out is blue dye transfer from jeans on front seat. Kid is no problem.
Absolutely would do again .
Don't do it. You'll have a lot of people disagree with me, even posting they have the white interior too and have no issues, and that is fine. I listened to the same feedback when I was buying my car and my 9 month old car has suffered from permanent blue dye transfer - I don't even wear jeans!
I love my car and absolutely baby it, take care of it really well, even wash it weekly in the winter. I absolutely regret the white seats and would not do it again. Don't get me wrong, it's beautiful but don't believe the group think that it doesn't stain or the silly youtube videos wear people are spilling coffee, wine or ketchup and immediately wiping it off - that is not an abrasive stain, that is a mess.
If you are going to ignore my advice, that is fine, but for the love of all that is holy, ceramic coat the seats.
How can you say "not true" when you've never seen my car or my experience or anyone else's who has had dye transfer onto the white seats? Your confirmation bias does not make it a solid fact that you can say "not true". Are you claiming the white does NOT get dye transfer at all? Because that is pure BS. Be careful with your words - it's this type of language that leads people to believe the white seats are impenetrable - they are not. They are risky and claiming they do not stain from dye transfer because you "live in Levi's" and only using your own experience as proof is confirmation bias. There are hundreds, if not thousands of posts that completely disagree with you. Also, never in my post did I say jeans cause dye transfer - in fact, I said the exact opposite, my dye transfer is NOT from jeans, which should concern you more that you are using a myth that it's only blue jeans that cause the transfer.Not true at all, I live in Levis. After 16000 miles I have had to clean them a couple of times to remove the little bit of blue, but it comes off easily. I use Sonax Alcantara cleaner. I know there are many threads on cleaning the white seats, but this is what I used. I did put the ceramic on them when new.
Don't do it. You'll have a lot of people disagree with me, even posting they have the white interior too and have no issues, and that is fine. I listened to the same feedback when I was buying my car and my 9 month old car has suffered from permanent blue dye transfer - I don't even wear jeans!
I love my car and absolutely baby it, take care of it really well, even wash it weekly in the winter. I absolutely regret the white seats and would not do it again. Don't get me wrong, it's beautiful but don't believe the group think that it doesn't stain or the silly youtube videos wear people are spilling coffee, wine or ketchup and immediately wiping it off - that is not an abrasive stain, that is a mess.
If you are going to ignore my advice, that is fine, but for the love of all that is holy, ceramic coat the seats.
Yep, you can ceramic coat vinyl and leather, you can specifically coat the vinyl on Tesla's. Most common brands are CQuartz and Ceramic Pro.What do you recommend for ceramic leather? I didn't even know you could do this, I have done paint, but not leather. I like Adams, wonder if they have something.
Don't do it. You'll have a lot of people disagree with me, even posting they have the white interior too and have no issues, and that is fine. I listened to the same feedback when I was buying my car and my 9 month old car has suffered from permanent blue dye transfer - I don't even wear jeans!
I love my car and absolutely baby it, take care of it really well, even wash it weekly in the winter. I absolutely regret the white seats and would not do it again. Don't get me wrong, it's beautiful but don't believe the group think that it doesn't stain or the silly youtube videos wear people are spilling coffee, wine or ketchup and immediately wiping it off - that is not an abrasive stain, that is a mess.
If you are going to ignore my advice, that is fine, but for the love of all that is holy, ceramic coat the seats.
Wow, never knew this was a thing.Yep, you can ceramic coat vinyl and leather, you can specifically coat the vinyl on Tesla's. Most common brands are CQuartz and Ceramic Pro.
I cannot stress this enough - if you go white, get this done DAY 1. Seriously - arrange for the car to be driven straight to a shop to get this done or do the CQuartz at home, but I would pay a professional to put on multiple coats of this stuff.
The downside is it affects the wallets of detailers selling ceramic coatings.Are there any downsides to ceramic coating the interior? In particular, does it change the look or feel of the seats at all? Second, if you apply the coating once are you committed to doing it every year or for the life of the interior- i.e. does it start looking bad as it wears off or attract even more dirt compared to just using traditional cleaning products without ever ceramic coating?
I wear expensive jeans that tend to transfer dye a lot more than something like Levis. Not raw denim but if you rub a white towel on them you can see the blue quite clearly.