Is it better or worse than boot polish?
Certainly less versatile, unless you paint your boots with it.
Edited by edlithgow on 01/02/2023 at 12:27
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Thanks both, helpful replies. It is probably a waste of time, money. Also, I agree, it does look backstreet sales. I'll stop.
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Thanks both, helpful replies. It is probably a waste of time, money. Also, I agree, it does look backstreet sales. I'll stop.
I don't of course care what my tyres look like, but I have wondered if some treatment would protect them from ozone/ultraviolet etc and slow down the development of cracking. I experimented with sunflower oil on my last set of tyres, which I'm fairly sure was a mistake.
There is an anti UV spray used on rubber dinghies, called, IIRC, Aerospace 330, which might be a candidate, but I can't get that in Taiwan.
I can get boot polish though.
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Lidl used to sell an aerosol tyre cleaner, much like a typical upholstery cleaner in action, spray on foam wipe off after a short time and left the sidewalls looking not fake but like brand new rubber.
As with so many of the superb products Lidl used to sell i haven't seen it for years.
Through my pressure washer soap dispenser i use Dirtbusters Snow Foam Wash and Wax, that too leaves the tyres looking pristine, it also comes in various flavours, i use the cherry flavoured which leaves the drive smelling really nice afterwards...it looks expenisve at around £22 for 5 litres, but its concentrated and despite adjusting the soap dial right back i've still had to mix it with 50% water, only on my second 5 litre tub after probably 2 years of washing 2 cars most weeks.
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Thanks both, helpful replies. It is probably a waste of time, money. Also, I agree, it does look backstreet sales. I'll stop.
I don't of course care what my tyres look like, but I have wondered if some treatment would protect them from ozone/ultraviolet etc and slow down the development of cracking. I experimented with sunflower oil on my last set of tyres, which I'm fairly sure was a mistake.
There is an anti UV spray used on rubber dinghies, called, IIRC, Aerospace 330, which might be a candidate, but I can't get that in Taiwan.
I can get boot polish though.
Burt Monroe used shoe polish on the tyres of his record breaking Indian motorbike (assuming the film was factually correct on that detail).
When I started working as a valeted in a SAAB dealership in 1990, the boss was mad keen on tyre paint. Personally, I thought I looked absolutely horrible, but he insisted!. By the time I left around 4.5 years later, he had been persuaded that tyre dressing was better than paint, both for the tyre and the appearance of the car.
But IMO, a shiny finish on tyres looks well naff!
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Thanks both, helpful replies. It is probably a waste of time, money. Also, I agree, it does look backstreet sales. I'll stop.
I don't of course care what my tyres look like, but I have wondered if some treatment would protect them from ozone/ultraviolet etc and slow down the development of cracking. I experimented with sunflower oil on my last set of tyres, which I'm fairly sure was a mistake.
There is an anti UV spray used on rubber dinghies, called, IIRC, Aerospace 330, which might be a candidate, but I can't get that in Taiwan.
I can get boot polish though.
Burt Monroe used shoe polish on the tyres of his record breaking Indian motorbike (assuming the film was factually correct on that detail).
Yes, I remember that, but IIRC, at least according to Sir Anthony Hopkin's, he was doing that to pass some kind of track marshall inspection, so it was for mere cosmetics, rather than a useful protective function, though it might still have one.
IIRC he didn't use Kiwi, but some other brand that I can't remember, even though he was playing an (apparently Welsh) New Zealander
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