DIY: Black Plastic Restoration

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  • fresh_TD
    replied
    Originally posted by MuddyDuck
    Will this work on the hatch cover for my convertible top? The plastic cover has faded and looks dried-out in spots. Would it work even thought it is blue without changing the color?


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    it should..just try it, it won't hurt anything

    Sent from my Samsung Note 4

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  • MuddyDuck
    replied
    DIY: Black Plastic Restoration

    Will this work on the hatch cover for my convertible top? The plastic cover has faded and looks dried-out in spots. Would it work even thought it is blue, without changing the color?

    Leave a comment:


  • E30NJ
    replied
    I have to do that to my airbox. Nice write up.

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  • mr2peak
    replied
    So I scrubbed everything down with the alcohol, and it already looks factory fresh. What's the point of the linseed and thinner? Is it a protective coating?

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  • squidmaster
    replied
    Gave it a whirl on some plastic parts on my 190e. Just used Maguire's 'Back to Black' on the other cars and this method blew BtB away by a long shot. (As a note I used BtB on these handles when I bought the car 6 or so months ago.)




    Thank you for the write up!

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  • GutenGirl
    replied
    Originally posted by jhaurimn
    Hey guys,

    Thought I'd share my experience. This has been documented but the pictures show how well it really works. Here is what you need

    Boiled linseed oil
    Paint thinner (mineral spirits)
    Isopropyl alcohol (optional)
    Cloth/towel



    The alcohol is to help clean and prep the area. You can do this by other means. Make sure you get boiled linseed oil and not non-boiled.



    So here's what inspired me to give this a go. My air filter housing for my m3 is pretty nasty looking. I just got the AFM refurbished from Greg, so there's no way I can use the housing as is. I tried using other dressing sprays but it didn't work very well.

    Well, after cleaning the area with isopropyl alcohol, I mixed the linseed oil and paint thinner about 50/50. Then I dabbed my cloth in it and applied it to the housing. I waited a minute then wiped the excess.





    I think the pictures say it all. The plastic looks so much better, almost new. I wish I knew this before I painted all my trim pieces with trim paint, because this would of restored them perfectly. You can expect to pay about $15 for everything you need.

    So I'd strongly recommend this to restore door trim, bumper trim, any black plastic pieces really. I was about to spend $160 on a new filter housing, no need to anymore.
    So this will work well on bumpers? I have a mk2 golf that has the black plastic bumpers and I've been dragging my feet about what to do with them.
    Thanks for this, really useful and easy. (Looking.)

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  • jhaurimn
    replied
    Originally posted by Semblance
    Actually this did nothing to change the faded plastic of my window circuit breaker. But it worked great on everything else, I'm a big fan. "Mixing chems" here is about as hard as putting cream in your coffee. It's not a scientific thing, you're just thinning the oil a little. I'd much rather do this than paint. But hey, to each his own.

    Anybody tried seatbelt receptacles yet?
    Yes. It works great if the receptacles arent too far gone yet.

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  • Semblance
    replied
    Actually this did nothing to change the faded plastic of my window circuit breaker. But it worked great on everything else, I'm a big fan. "Mixing chems" here is about as hard as putting cream in your coffee. It's not a scientific thing, you're just thinning the oil a little. I'd much rather do this than paint. But hey, to each his own.

    Anybody tried seatbelt receptacles yet?

    Leave a comment:


  • jhaurimn
    replied
    Originally posted by Thizzelle
    how is it easier than painting?
    I took grilles off, cleaned, dried then sprayed 3 coats of trim paint on them. They look brand new.
    This way you have to mix chems together then wipe them a bunch and get all the nooks and crannies, doesn't seam worth it, sorry.
    -You dont have to take pieces off of the car to paint them.
    -You dont need to worry about paint peeling, uneven paint, and imperfections from painting basically.
    -You keep pieces original, no one likes cheaply painted pieces.
    -Works on all plastic, not just black plastic.

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  • Ijl
    replied
    It's preserving rather than covering up I guess


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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  • Aleman
    replied
    This method will never chip

    Sent from my DROID RAZR HD using Tapatalk

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  • Thizzelle
    replied
    how is it easier than painting?
    I took grilles off, cleaned, dried then sprayed 3 coats of trim paint on them. They look brand new.
    This way you have to mix chems together then wipe them a bunch and get all the nooks and crannies, doesn't seam worth it, sorry.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ijl
    replied
    DIY: Black Plastic Restoration

    Tried this today.... Could use a 2nd application in the future but not bad and easier that painting them!

    After


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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  • Semblance
    replied
    yeah, i was hoping for a solvent. we'll see if i have the energy for the heat gun. sorry for being off topic.

    thanks!

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  • MT3CH
    replied
    Originally posted by Semblance
    Oh, I thought that was cosmoline sort of flaking in your first pic. Thanks though, and thanks for this awesome fix!
    First off, jharuimn thank you for the write up! Worked very well on the plastics on my car.

    Secondly, Semblance check this out http://www.r3vlimited.com/board/show...moline+removal
    Here's a video as well.


    Hope this helps! :D

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