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Interior Detailing

Posted: Thu Feb 15, 2024 7:09 am
by RobJJW
Hi everyone,

What products are you guys using to keep the interior of your GTIs in showroom condition?

All replies greatly appreciated.

Re: Interior Detailing

Posted: Thu Feb 15, 2024 7:27 am
by SRGTD
The interior of my GTI+ rarely gets dirty, so usually it gets just a quick vacuum of the seats and carpets, a shake out and brush of the floor mats and a wipe over or brush of the dash and other plastic parts with a clean microfibre cloth and / or a soft bristled detailing brush. For the interior surfaces of the windows and windscreen, I use Autobrite Crystal glass cleaner (I use it on the outside glass too). If the dash air vents are dusty between the slats, I use the soft detailing brush to remove the dust.

IMHO doing the above regularly eliminates the need for lots of interior cleaning products, and the interior of my car is still pretty much in showroom condition after 41 months of ownership. Consumption of food and drink in the car is a big no-no for me, so I don’t ever have any food or drink spillages to contend with.

I do have some Poorboys Natural Look Dressing for the interior plastics and trim but I think I’ve only used it a couple of times since I got the car in September 2020, and then I used it mainly for its smell (it smells of marzipan! 🙂).

Re: Interior Detailing

Posted: Thu Feb 15, 2024 10:28 am
by RobJJW
Cheers SRGTD :D

Re: Interior Detailing

Posted: Thu Feb 15, 2024 10:38 am
by Maarten
For the dash and (plastic) trims Poorboy's Natural Look
The rest as SRGTD describes.

When very dirty you could buy an extractor or have a detailer do this for you

Re: Interior Detailing

Posted: Sat Feb 17, 2024 11:11 pm
by grazuncle2
similar the SRGTD

I rarely have food and drink either and we are extremely careful (we have no kids) if we do.

A friend got in my car recently and said it still looked brand new.. (it is 2019 plate so was well chuffed with that comment. :)

I did find an interior wipe pack from a local Aldi when they were doing a 'car week' .. they clean dust off surfaces like the console or binnacle so easily but doesn't leave any residue.. I was really surprised. Being tight with money (I won't mention the P word here :) I manage to get the larger, cleaner, surfaces done and move down to grubbier sections that don't show (i.e. bottom of the car doors) with the same cloth.. they are quite large pieces when unfolded. I can get away with two usually if not really dusty. I wash them out afterwards and dry them to use under bonnet like dipstick wipes.

..and I'm not a Yorkshireman.. No offense to Yorkshiremen.. they have got it right in my eyes.. :D :D

Re: Interior Detailing

Posted: Thu Feb 22, 2024 10:56 am
by Nora
From new the interior fabrics (seats, carpets, mats and boot trim) where treated with Gyeon Q2 fabricoat, once dry it makes it virtually waterproof and resistant to coffee and other liquids, the glass was treated with nilglass and other surfaces treated with Koch-Chemie GUF Gummifix

Re: Interior Detailing

Posted: Fri Feb 23, 2024 12:51 pm
by grazuncle2
I took a quick look at that as never heard of it previously.. it's not cheap is it!

80ml does 1 sq/m small bottle will do 1 1/2 and they recommend doing it every 6 months. Think I'll just be careful

.. each to his own of course

Re: Interior Detailing

Posted: Fri Feb 23, 2024 2:17 pm
by SRGTD
Food and drink isn’t consumed in my car, so drink spillages and difficult to remove food detritus from the seats and carpets isn’t an issue (I only use the cup holders in the centre console as a place to put my keys and petrol receipts; not drinks 🤣).

I have a waterproof boot liner with quite a high lip around the edge, so if anything from the weekly grocery shopping trip does get broken and/or spilt, then hopefully it’ll be contained within the ‘walls’ of the liner and not spill over onto the boot floor / boot trim.