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My door panel tops were brown and starting to crack so I had just the tops replaced. I think it was $95.00 each panel. They used a slightly padded vinyl and it has a little give to it now. I like it on the arm. I can not see going with black on a cab because of the sun. You would burn the crap out of you when getting in the car after it has sat in the sun.
92 968 cab (cobalt blue/black top/grey int)
87 944S
19 Audi A6 3.0T
03 Toyota Tundra
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Hey Rxter,
Here's my report on how my repairs are holding up...
I recolored 4 areas on my car about 2 or 3 years ago. They are all a bit different and are aging differently as a result.
First, my driver's seat is doing great. I fixed a tear and a worn-through spot on the left bolster with sub-patches and leather filler and applied color. Not long after it was done, I had to re-do the tear where the filler had cracked. I did a much better job the second time, tapering the edges to reduce stress concentration edges. It's holding up great!
I also applied color on my shift boot. Here some of the color has worn off in the grip area. The Leather World Technologies web site
http://www.leatherworldtech.com shows a product that you are supposed to add to the dye/color spray for high wear areas such as shift knobs and steering wheels. When I re-do the shift boot I will make sure to use it.
I used a leather (and vinyl) filler and grain copier on the top of the driver's side door panel before spraying it to fill in a bunch of cracks. That has held up well, but the color is starting to wear off a bit where I rest my arm. Not bad, but here again my plan is to re-spray with the extra "toughening" ingredient.
The passenger's door panel has no isues with color, as it rarely gets touched, but it is now starting to crack a bit. It was in better shape than the driver's door when I first sprayed it, so it did not require any filler. It's still OK for now, but eventually I will fill the cracks and spray it too.
As I said before, color matching was perfect after sending them a scrap of my interior vinyl.
Jamie
Early '92 black coupe with classic grey interior, LSD, Original 17" C2 Turbo wheels, sport seats, and recessed hood badge. Recent upgrade to RSB Stage 1 with air box mod, Yellow Koni Sport adjustable shocks and struts, stiffer springs, RSB SS clutch and brake lines, and 968Forums sun screen...
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I've been going over parts of my interior with a product called Surflex. It's a water based dye that works great. They have porsche classic-gray in stock. You can purchase it at colorplus.com. I have no affiliation with the company, ect... It just looks great and it easy to use.
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96 C4S - Arena Red/Cashmere - many mods
95 968 Cab - White/Grey - mostly stock
02 Audi Allroad - my twin turbo
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As I work thru listing my repair/restoration to do's...and looking at the prices of parts
if they are available.....I'm considering re-coating a few of the parts of my classic grey interior. Seats will be re-covered. Door panels have already had a shoddy repair job done to the top surface, so replacement is in order. Full carpet replacement. And the plastic frame pieces around the windshield are all warped and discolored and must be replaced--at an OUTRAGEOUS cost as far as I've found, btw.
However, the dash, the center console, and the rear area side panels are are salvageable, IMO, with SEM restoration to the main parts and replacement of periphery (like boot, switches, ashtray, etc.).
Anybody ever figure out which SEM color best matches the classic grey?
'94 Cabriolet, Iris Blue /Classic Grey