Freshly cleaned interior/exterior
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Except the problem with vinyl is the vapor residue that it gives off. The oily vapor given off by vinyl (upholstery, vinyl dashes, other interior vinyls), especially as vinyl grows older, when exposed to sunlight. The hotter the weather-and the hotter a car's interior-the greater the vaporization of the vinyl. Not all vinyls vaporize as readily as others; nor do all give off equal amounts of vapor.
Most people seeing a vinyl-vapor-smudged windshield or windows assume the driver is a smoker. Maybe, but vinyl vapor leaves a far more bothersome residue on glass-and on the car's entire interior- than any dozen packs of cigarettes. In sunbelt states, especially in summer with the windows shut, vinyl residue can come close to coating interior glass in a single day. Not only is the residue car-disfiguring, it is dangerous, limiting visibility.
My dad gets it in his e30 on the windshield all the time from his vinyl seats. I have never noticed it in my car, because I have leather seats.
Source: AutoZone Pro CarCare Reference Library (http://www.procarcare.com/icarumba/r..._bodycare3.asp)Leave a comment:
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Thanks for the kind words guys.
Thanks man! The wheels are 15x7 BBS RS001's w/ 205/50/15 Dunlop Direzza's.
Here the best angle. Doesn't cover as much surface area as the mtech spoiler.
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Do you have a profile shot of that spoiler? I think it would look awesome if it extended out as much as the MT1 spoilerLeave a comment:
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Looks really good. I am not a huge fan of black interior in darker colored cars though. I like a little contrast.Leave a comment:


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