![]() 10/21/2016 at 19:19 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
They are too slippery, gets to hot when its hot out, gets to cold when its cold out, wears terribly over time.
Would I be weird to order a Rolls Royce with really nice cloth seats?
![]() 10/21/2016 at 19:24 |
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Solution:
Wool Seats!
![]() 10/21/2016 at 19:27 |
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My moms van when I grew up had wool seat covers, they where comfy as fuck.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 19:28 |
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Artificial leather = best leather.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 19:49 |
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Hand stitched leather=best leather
![]() 10/21/2016 at 19:57 |
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Years ago I sold a friend my old E21 320i. He never really liked the look of the sheepskin seat covers I kept on it and removed them shortly after taking ownership. Then he started complaining about the heat of the seats in summer, and how cold they were in winter. Then he saw the price tag on good sheepskin covers and realized that perhaps the aesthetics could be overlooked.
I’ve got a cloth interior but would really like to find some appropriate sheepskins. Damn those things are comfortable...
![]() 10/21/2016 at 19:58 |
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I love Toyota’s reasoning behind these. That leather is too squeaky and would disturb the quiet ambience of the Century. The only car I’d prefer cloth over leather in.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:18 |
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I would do bad things for a Toyota century
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:20 |
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But they look so snazzy.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:21 |
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snazzy = shit.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:22 |
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I exaggerate only slightly when I say that I have never encountered a more obviously, incomprehensibly wrong take in my entire life. Leather looks 1000 times better and wears 100 times better than fabric if you take any care of it at all. It is nearly impossible to stain as long as it isn’t white and will never smell. Fabric
will
tear eventually, because its fibers
will
break down over time and it
will
stretch. Leather, if you condition it, like, once a year, and don’t park outside in direct sunlight in Arizona every day, may wear like a well-worn pair of shoes but probably will never tear, and in anything worth driving is no more expensive than fabric to fix or replace if it does.* Are there plenty of older cars out there with terrible leather interiors because they were never maintained at all? Of course. But every fabric interior in the world looks like a flophouse bedspread after 10 years or so, and is about as desirable to touch. In a used car, the previous owner’s lifetime of ass sweat can be wiped off a leather interior and forgotten. In a fabric interior, it is
in
the interior forever, and
in
the foam inside, along with traces of every food item they ever touched and every fart they ever released
* The exception to the tearing point is Porsche 944 interiors, which used the thinnest leather imaginable. But the 944 fabric interiors wear just as bad and are actually more expensive to replace, so.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:26 |
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Still not convincing me.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:27 |
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Leather for life, because kids and cleaning up spills.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:30 |
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The only possible rational grounds to prefer fabric over leather (or even fake leather) is that sometimes leather gets hot, but that’s like choosing to eat dry bread instead of steak for a lifetime because sometimes you forget to check if your steak is too hot before putting it in your mouth.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:31 |
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Leather will last longer for a car that is driven occasionally.
For your typical everyday disposable commodity cars, cloth is more guilt-free to live with—as in you won’t end up caring about perfect upkeep as much.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:32 |
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I’m a cheap bastard.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:51 |
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So buy an interior you’ll never have to repair or replace. A year’s worth of maintenance costs $5. Even for a Rolls Royce.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:52 |
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In the long run, leather is cheaper to maintain. I used to be a cloth guy, until I got good leather. It isn’t too hot, it doesn’t make me sweat, and seat heaters fix the cold winter seats.
![]() 10/21/2016 at 20:53 |
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Except that everything you eat, drink, sneeze, sweat, or so on, stays on that seat. Every fluid released from your body stays with that cloth. Leather can be wiped off, and treated for longevity.
![]() 10/22/2016 at 11:43 |
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Just swinging by to say I love those Meguire’s leather conditioning wipes (thus far).
So easy.