I just recently received my order that I placed through Autogeek. I read a few great reviews regarding the two Aerospace products that I bought and was excited to be able to try them out on two details I did this weekend. I bought the large jug of cleaner and a 32oz. bottle of cleaner and spot remover.
After mixing up a 10:1 dilution ratio (most powerful) I proceeded to use it on a dog hair infested BMW convertible. By far the dirtiest interior I have seen. First thing I noticed about the product is that there are absolutely no suds whatsoever. Its like I was cleaning with pure water. It was a bit difficult to tell how well it cleaned on this particular car since the interior was all black, but it did leave some nasty white streaks on the hard textured plastic panels in the rear seating area and front seatbacks of which I could not remove. I was very disappointed with the product so far. The spot remover didn't work any better either on some minor carpet stains.
So today, I worked on a cream colored '06 or '07 Navigator with cream interior also. The leater seating surfaces were quite dirty in this car, so I figured I'd try the Aerospace cleaner once again. It was worthless. I couldn't believe they actually list on the contents that it can be used to clean oil tankers when it can't even handle the ground in dirt on a Navigor seat! I didn't even bother trying to use the spot remover this time. I just gave up with those products and went with some Key APC that I purchased from Keystone, which is an aftermarket parts distributor company. I just happened to see a gallon of this stuff in their warehouse one day and decided to give it a try.
Up until today I have only used it on wheels/tires, wheelwells, engines and undercarriages. It worked amazingly well on those areas, but it didn't even dawn on me to try it out on interior surfaces even though it lists dilution ratios on the bottle for such tasks. Unfortunately, I pretty much wasted $44 on that Aerospace crap. After spraying the Key APC on the seats and lightly scrubbing with a carpet brush, the seats came out looking just like new again and left no streaking either. I am totally impressed with this product and its less than half the cost of the Aerospace. I ended up using it to clean the carpets as well with the same exceptional results.
I will never be purchasing any Aerospace products ever again. Its all just a bunch of highly overrated useless crap. I should have known better than to purchase any more products from a company that manufactures protectant that smells just like body odor. Anybody know if autogeek will reimburse me, or at least let me send these products back for something else?
After mixing up a 10:1 dilution ratio (most powerful) I proceeded to use it on a dog hair infested BMW convertible. By far the dirtiest interior I have seen. First thing I noticed about the product is that there are absolutely no suds whatsoever. Its like I was cleaning with pure water. It was a bit difficult to tell how well it cleaned on this particular car since the interior was all black, but it did leave some nasty white streaks on the hard textured plastic panels in the rear seating area and front seatbacks of which I could not remove. I was very disappointed with the product so far. The spot remover didn't work any better either on some minor carpet stains.
So today, I worked on a cream colored '06 or '07 Navigator with cream interior also. The leater seating surfaces were quite dirty in this car, so I figured I'd try the Aerospace cleaner once again. It was worthless. I couldn't believe they actually list on the contents that it can be used to clean oil tankers when it can't even handle the ground in dirt on a Navigor seat! I didn't even bother trying to use the spot remover this time. I just gave up with those products and went with some Key APC that I purchased from Keystone, which is an aftermarket parts distributor company. I just happened to see a gallon of this stuff in their warehouse one day and decided to give it a try.
Up until today I have only used it on wheels/tires, wheelwells, engines and undercarriages. It worked amazingly well on those areas, but it didn't even dawn on me to try it out on interior surfaces even though it lists dilution ratios on the bottle for such tasks. Unfortunately, I pretty much wasted $44 on that Aerospace crap. After spraying the Key APC on the seats and lightly scrubbing with a carpet brush, the seats came out looking just like new again and left no streaking either. I am totally impressed with this product and its less than half the cost of the Aerospace. I ended up using it to clean the carpets as well with the same exceptional results.
I will never be purchasing any Aerospace products ever again. Its all just a bunch of highly overrated useless crap. I should have known better than to purchase any more products from a company that manufactures protectant that smells just like body odor. Anybody know if autogeek will reimburse me, or at least let me send these products back for something else?