Black dull rubber

There is a good product you can get from your local BMW dealership is called gummi pfledge, it is used to lubricate and protect door seals in their cars. You could aslo use a good vinyl/rubber protectant like 303.
 
Use Black Again or if they are so faded and stained use Forever Black.



I detailed over the weekend my grandomthers 1996 Civic which has never been washed, polished or waxed. I used Black Again on every black piece of trim and Forever Black on the strip that goes along the bottom of the windows. Looks brand new. Great products.
 
303 Aerospace Protectant. My sealers are not weathered so they just retain their original appearance after application. I use on all seals on this car and the Lexus.

If your seals are faded you may need something that dyes them back to black and then treat and maintain with 303.:xyxthumbs
 
I am requiring some of that Forever Black:o !! It is a niucance to keep applying products to a faded/stain moldings that do not wear long.
 
ashsarna said:
I am requiring some of that Forever Black:o !! It is a niucance to keep applying products to a faded/stain moldings that do not wear long.



Your cars are new ( In my book own '63 - 95' cars). Why do you need a dyeing agent already? Extreme sun exposure? Hard winters?:nixweiss
 
blkZ28Conv said:
Your cars are new ( In my book own '63 - 95' cars). Why do you need a dyeing agent already? Extreme sun exposure? Hard winters?:nixweiss



The cars are new, and this affects only a few small places on the molding of the s80.



The reason for the stain (more than any real fading) is that I actually used wax that stain trims!! (this was before I knew about this sight:rolleyes: ). I have been paying ever since (and I have tried several ways of cleaning the stained trims).
 
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