Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a
free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
If you're not a student, there's also a
free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.
You can also earn cash back rewards on Amazon and Whole Foods purchases with the
Amazon Prime Visa credit card. Read our review to see if it’s the right card for you.
118 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Featured Comments
Also, under features and details they state "All 303 Products are good for 2 years after the packaging date on the bottle". As someone already mentioned, that's a whole lot of product to use in two years.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
I will use it in car interiors, but prefer a very mild soap/water solution instead.
I use it as a protectant as most of my surfaces are still in good shape. I reapply it regularly as it doesn't last forever. Maybe monthly depending on usage.
It is great for cleaning and making my boat cover look new, but I use 303 fabric guard to waterproof my cover. It will make water bead and run, but again, doesn't last forever.
It will make tires look good and clean too. It can help rubber stay in good shape (as previous poster mentioned wiper blades).
Lastly, for fiberglass/gel coat and automotive painted surfaces I stick with normal automotive or marine waxes for UV blocking and shine. I don't believe 303 is a replacement for a good wax job.
1) Its amazing for soft vinyl/rubber surfaces.
2) Will not bring back dead surfaces to life
3) Kind of okay hard surfaces like plastic bumpers, but will wash away with enough water
4) Will make your car mats and steering wheel slick
5) Wipe off the product after application to get rid of shine and leave a matte sheen.
6) Very little product is required, more is not good in this case.
7) Water based product, not the same as armour all
8) Works as a great matte tire dressing (expensive though)
9) Do not spray on clear plastics ( it will spot the surface permanently
10) Works great on outdoor furniture.
1) Its amazing for soft vinyl/rubber surfaces.
2) Will not bring back dead surfaces to life
3) Kind of okay hard surfaces like plastic bumpers, but will wash away with enough water
4) Will make your car mats and steering wheel slick
5) Wipe off the product after application to get rid of shine and leave a matte sheen.
6) Very little product is required, more is not good in this case.
7) Water based product, not the same as armour all
8) Works as a great matte tire dressing (expensive though)
9) Do not spray on clear plastics ( it will spot the surface permanently
10) Works great on outdoor furniture.
1) restore fading on plastic side trim/panels found on exterior of many modern vehicles.
2) restore fading on Pelican boxes that have been faded by the sun.
I don't believe it will work well as both of those are hard type plastics. Do you agree?
I will likely just return back to Amazon if that's the case.
1) restore fading on plastic side trim/panels found on exterior of many modern vehicles.
2) restore fading on Pelican boxes that have been faded by the sun.
I don't believe it will work well as both of those are hard type plastics. Do you agree?
I will likely just return back to Amazon if that's the case.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Dilute urethane with some turpentine then apply can also protect and shine fiberglass doors that are fading from the sun with that mix
The price after S&S is $50 now.
What I want to do is clean out the engine bay with a pressure washer, but I don't want to screw anything up. From what I saw on YouTube, so long as you don't use like a <15° nozzle, are further away with the nozzle, and potentially also cover harness connectors with plastic bags it's not that big of a deal to use a pressure washer in the engine bay. Still scared... but my God does the engine bay look bad (any areas I didn't touchup by hand).
Is it this one?
CERAKOTE® Ceramic Trim Coat Kit - Quick Plastic Trim Restorer - Ceramic Coating Black Trim Restoration to Last Over 200 Washes – A Ceramic Coating, Not a Dressing https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07SHJVK4G
What I want to do is clean out the engine bay with a pressure washer, but I don't want to screw anything up. From what I saw on YouTube, so long as you don't use like a <15° nozzle, are further away with the nozzle, and potentially also cover harness connectors with plastic bags it's not that big of a deal to use a pressure washer in the engine bay. Still scared... but my God does the engine bay look bad (any areas I didn't touchup by hand).
Yes, and you can use just a hose too. Just get a brush and cleaner to agitate and loosen the dirt up. Then just rinse it off. But the Motorplast is for the plastic and metal components, the whole engine bay. And it stays looking great for many months.