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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

Best plastic trim restorer


The Raven

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I used this after my neighbour recommended it, applied 2 coats on my 1990 Shogun and was very impressed. Applied maybe 4 months ago and still not faded. 
 

I only used 2 coats, gets darker the more you apply. wears gloves is all I say lol, I never and it took a few days to get completely off.
 

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/MLM-Car-Care-Black-Bumper-Dye-Trim-Restorer-Rubber-Restorer-Black-Trim-Dye-500ml-/382866523709?_trksid=p2349624.m46890.l49292

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17 hours ago, mwilkinson said:

For me there is only one decent long lasting option available.

Eastwood Plastic Resurfacer

 

26 minutes ago, Andrew K said:

Same here best long lasting stuff I’ve ever used is the Eastwood Plastic Resurfacer. 

Is this a black spray paint? would i have to tape up or remove all the trim? There is a shed ton of it to do if so.

Edited by The Raven (see edit history)
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It’s not completely black but once applied brings the plastic trim back to factory colour,  it’s called Matte Black Plastic Resurfacer and a Pre Painting Prep cleaner was recommended to use first. 
 

that the only down side to using it as it’s best to take the part off your working on, don’t see why it couldn’t be done on the car if it was masked up well around the part your working on. 
 

E283C33A-C5AD-483D-8079-EBE8B1EFF3D7.thumb.jpeg.0252b95ecd16ecdf26f81b890287b46f.jpeg

both spoilers were in the same condition before I started, in this picture above the top cleaner one has the matte black resurfacer on it, the bottom one old and faded from new. 

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8 minutes ago, blythmrk said:

This is black paint then!

No.  It behaves very differently. I don't know what the science is behind the product but it doesn't sit on the plastic like a paint.

On my front lip there is a natural defect in the plastic; looks like a colour variation caused during the manufacturing process.  When I applied this product,  whilst everything turned a nice new black, you could still see the defect.  If it was a paint this defect would have been masked by the paint.

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4 hours ago, mwilkinson said:

No.  It behaves very differently. I don't know what the science is behind the product but it doesn't sit on the plastic like a paint.

On my front lip there is a natural defect in the plastic; looks like a colour variation caused during the manufacturing process.  When I applied this product,  whilst everything turned a nice new black, you could still see the defect.  If it was a paint this defect would have been masked by the paint.

It sounds good I may have to try some but I still I see it more of a paint though as it’s just not a wipe on clear gel/silicone product that simply washes off!

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