meguairs apc 10:1 took of plastic coating in hummer!!

quamen

New member
We were working on the hummer, actually Brain was cleaing it up. Ran out of pink stuff interior cleaner, so used some APC 10 parts water , one part cleaner. It actually took of some plastic coating near the kick panel below the radio! I though the dilution for plastic was 10:1 for this stuff!! What is the deal?
 
It has more to do with the dye than the APC - it should be safe on any interior at 10:1. I've had similar problems on rubber GM issue floormats, I ended up dying them with trim dye, worked out OK, didn't have to fess up :).
 
Meg's Apc is pretty strong stuff. If you don't dilute it at least 10 to 1 you can get white dots on trim. not strong enough remove plastic coating though.
 
wannafbody said:
blame it on GM :chuckle:

I disagree totally. I have had that happen to two vehicles that that has happened to. I complianed to Megs also but ofcourse nothing was done. I have abandoned this product entirely for this reason. Use with caution.
 
Actually it was my H2... it was not "gm" quality so those comments do not help. We ran other cleaners over the same panel to check and nothing. The APC was at fault. Trust me these panels and truck have been put thru hell on and offroad.. etc. One pass from the APC and the plastic dye was removed in one spot. So far no god reviews from me. Just lucky it was my truck not a clients since we don't give two Sh*ts about the H2. :)





Will be letting meg know about this I would like to see them replace this panel those bas..nm :wall
 
Boy that is good to know I have to do a Hummer today and would have probably used APC, I quess I will go with Woolite and water and a Magic Wand for panels. I also have some good foaming upholestry cleaner which is more gentle than APC.
 
I found a very similar situation with Stoner interior cleaner (or whatever it was called). Some of these products are "safe" for plastis...but not safe for interior parts that are painted plastic. Lots of makers have the parts molded in a given color and then paint them to match the interiors.



Makes me wonder how "safe" they are for plastic that is molded in color.
 
detailthis said:
Meg's Apc is pretty strong stuff. If you don't dilute it at least 10 to 1 you can get white dots on trim. not strong enough remove plastic coating though.



OK, those "white dots" - any way to remove them? Or has damage been done to the plastic?
 
Zealot said:
OK, those "white dots" - any way to remove them? Or has damage been done to the plastic?





Re-dye/Re-paint them. Some dressings hide problems, but thats only temporary.
 
I haven't had any problems with Meg's APC taking the dye out of plastics, but I have had it do that to leather. It also stains the crap out of glass if allowed to dry, and the only thing I've found so far that'll get it off is steel wool with glass cleaner. Having had great sucess with #39 on a recent detail I may switch over to that full time for vinyl interiors, problem is, to ditch APC I then need a leather cleaner than can actually clean leather. All of the ones so far I have tried just don't cut it like APC does, hence I'm still using it.



Ben
 
While I do not use Megs APC, a 10:1 dilution is usually for wheels and tires etc. At least in the case of Hi-Temps Extreme Clean APC. For interior plastic 15:1 or even 20:1 would be safer. I choose to use a milder cleaner for interior plastic, vinyl and leather. Most true APC's are very concentrated so that they can be dilluted to accomplish many tasks.
 
I've been using APC diluted 10:1 for quite sometime now and have not had any problems with it...and I use it on everything!!



How hard were you rubbing on those trim pieces??
 
brwill2005 said:
While I do not use Megs APC, a 10:1 dilution is usually for wheels and tires etc. At least in the case of Hi-Temps Extreme Clean APC. For interior plastic 15:1 or even 20:1 would be safer. I choose to use a milder cleaner for interior plastic, vinyl and leather. Most true APC's are very concentrated so that they can be dilluted to accomplish many tasks.

Well the back of the bottle basically says use it on everything, 10:1 for normal duty and 4:1 for heavy duty, so that's what I've gone with. I may try mixing up a 20:1 to see how it performs, but then I'll have three triggerhead bottles just for APC!



Ben
 
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