I got ahold of some Leatherique and have coated the black seats of my 1989 BMW 325is with the Rejuvinator Oil. (Un)fortunately, these seats don't have a lot of seams for the oil to permeate into. It's mostly large sheets of leather with a some stitches running through them only for decoration.
Anyway, I put the oil in about 24 hours ago and much of the oil hasn't absorbed into the leather. Some of it has but not nearly as much as I thought. I know some people recommend leaving it on for 2-3 days, but I've also heard 8 hrs. It's HOT here in SoCal, too, especially inside a black/black car! I should say that I applied the Lexol treatment onto the front seats about 6 months ago and TW to the rear bench (not the front seats, though) about 1 month ago. Could this affect the absorption of the RO? I'm not crazy about scrubbing my seats with sandpaper...
As for whether my seats are covered in some sort of vinyl or clearcoat... I've tried the drop of water test and it seems that a small amount of water does absorb into the seats. Not a lot, but some. Most just wipes off but it leaves a small water stain. Does this mean my seats aren't coated? Thanks!
Anyway, I put the oil in about 24 hours ago and much of the oil hasn't absorbed into the leather. Some of it has but not nearly as much as I thought. I know some people recommend leaving it on for 2-3 days, but I've also heard 8 hrs. It's HOT here in SoCal, too, especially inside a black/black car! I should say that I applied the Lexol treatment onto the front seats about 6 months ago and TW to the rear bench (not the front seats, though) about 1 month ago. Could this affect the absorption of the RO? I'm not crazy about scrubbing my seats with sandpaper...
As for whether my seats are covered in some sort of vinyl or clearcoat... I've tried the drop of water test and it seems that a small amount of water does absorb into the seats. Not a lot, but some. Most just wipes off but it leaves a small water stain. Does this mean my seats aren't coated? Thanks!