To clean your car’s dashboard, follow these five simple steps: vacuum, dust, wipe clean, dry, and polish. To maintain a lustrous shine, combine baby oil, dish soap, and vinegar into one cleaning solution. Vinegar disinfects the car and leaves a streak-free shine, while dish soap lifts and greases the dashboard.
To clean the dashboard with oil, first give it a quick dusting to remove dirt, grime, or dust that has built up. A top-rated car interior cleaner can be made by spraying and wiping down with a microfiber cloth. Olive oil, or any cooking oil, can also do wonders for your dashboard by protecting it against UV rays and having a natural sheen.
To clean the car dashboard at home, gather household items such as a small amount of olive oil onto a soft cloth and rubbing it into the car’s dashboard until it disappears. Any standard interior cleaner will work, but Murphy’s Oil soap is recommended due to its safe properties on plastics and leather.
To clean the remnants of the olive oil, soak them in boiling water and plenty of fairy liquid. Rub the oil onto a microfiber towel and rub it all over the dashboard. This not only makes the plastic shine but also makes it easier to clean.
If you’re unfamiliar with using olive/vegetable/coconut oil to condition your dashboard, put the mineral oil in a spray bottle or bowl and use a clean cloth to wipe a small amount of the dressing into the dashboard and any other surfaces. This will help maintain a lustrous shine on your car’s dashboard.
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I stopped the article and just read the comments. Sounds like a lot of you have had some success, I think I’m gonna go give it a try! Maybe if he gave some good reasons or demonstrated why it wouldn’t work, but when someone just gives a blanket statement without evidence to back it, I tend to tune out.
Just watched another article by some chick called Beni Beauty something? She did an interior detail using household products. Dashboard and top was cleaned with vinegar and water with a bit of essential oil, using a microfiber cloth, then a 50/50 mix of olive oil and vinegar (with a few drops of essential oil if you wish) applied (spray bottle) and wiped on with microfiber to work into vinyl or leather. Then clean dry microfiber cloth used to buff and take away any excess of oil residue. No dirt or dust once any surplus is removed, the finish looked good and apparently you won’t have to re-do it next week like is required with some store-bought products.
tried it last night, olive oil + lemon juice mixed together. the problem is this isn’t technically wrong, it’s just that he’s totally missing that the way to do it is by buffing it out. if i rub my hand across the dash, it goes easily across the dirty part of the dash, and grips more on the part where the oil’s been used because of how clean it is. the point is for the oil to not stay. please don’t take this guy at face value.