Soft top renovation

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Revision as of 22:10, 17 February 2008 by Steve69 (talk | contribs)
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Autoglym

To be written

Renovo

To be written

Cheap and cheerful

My hood has covered nearly 100k miles and had started to get a green moss tint. It didn't look dirty but it sure looked cleaner after renovation. It had not faded so I did not investigate soft top dyeing products.

You will need:

Some people rave about Thompsons Water seal, however I was worried that this could damage the hood so I chose to use Fabsil.

Pure soap is the least likely to damage your hood, ordinary cloths detergent is probably fine too, don't use wasking up liquid as this has loads of salt in it which will eventually rot the hood.

The dog brush is great as it is fairly coarse (like a firm tooth brush), reasonably big so it holds the soap and has a handy strap that stops the brush slipping out of your hand when the soap really starts to fly.

Buy a big can of Fabsil for about 15 quid, this should be enough for four coatings.

Mix about an egg cup full of soap flakes with about four pints or warm water, I used a saucepan for this. Lay the soft top on a flat surface (e.g. a garden table) and scrub it hard. If you have a moss/green slime problem then you will see this coming off.

Hang up the soft top up (on a washing line) and spray it with a garden hose, keep spraying until the water is all coming off clean.

leave the soft top hanging for a few hours, ideally in the sun, until its dry.

pour some Fabsil into a cereal bowl and paint it onto the outside of the soft top, make sure all the folds and pleats are throughly soaked.

hang up the soft top again.

let the hood dry completely, the tin says fabsil can take 6 hours to dry, however on a winters day in some sunshine it only took about 2 hours for mine to dry.

refit to the car - the hood will have shrunk a bit but it will stretch again with a few uses.