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Saving Your Sun-Baked Plastic Trim (Mar 2026)

Most car owners make this harder than it needs to be. Here's the straightforward approach that actually works—no fluff, no upselling.

Aussie UV kills exterior plastics faster than just about anything else. Here is how to fix that chalky grey look and actually make it stay black without using cheap greasy dressings.

MT
Mick Thompson Senior Detailing Editor
| Updated: 2 March 2026
Saving Your Sun-Baked Plastic Trim (Mar 2026)

Aussie Conditions

Australian conditions are tougher than most—intense UV, red dust, coastal salt, and 40°C summers. European car care advice often doesn't cut it here.
Quick Summary

Look, we've all seen it, that once-black trim on the wheel arches or bumpers turning a nasty, chalky grey. Between our brutal 40 degree summer days and the salt spray if you're near the coast, plastic takes a beating. This guide is for anyone who wants to bring that factory look back without it washing off the next time it rains.

01

The Grey Plastic Curse

Right, so your trim looks like it's been sitting in the Simpson Desert for a decade. It’s a classic Aussie problem. Most blokes just chuck some greasy 'tyre shine' on it and wonder why it looks splotchy two days later. Truth is, that stuff actually cooks the plastic faster under our sun. I've spent 15 years fixing 'restored' trim that was just covered in cheap silicone. If you want it done right, you've gotta clean it properly and use the right juice.

The 'Squeaky Clean' Secret

Most people fail because they don't clean the pores of the plastic. I learned this the hard way when I did a full resto on an old Patrol and the product peeled off in a week. Use a stiff nylon brush and a dedicated APC (All Purpose Cleaner) like Bowden’s Own Agent Orange. Scrub it until the suds stop coming up brown or grey. If there's old wax stuck in the texture, use a soft eraser or a dedicated wax remover. If it ain't clean, the restorer won't stick.

Dye, Don't Just Dress

Don't waste your money on those milky white 'protectants' from the servo if the plastic is already faded. They're fine for maintenance, but for restoration, you need something with actual pigment. My go-to is Solution Finish. It’s a trim restorer that actually puts the black carbon back into the surface. I once used this on a customer's faded Jeep flares that were almost white, and 12 months later, they still looked brand new. Just wear gloves, or you'll have black fingernails for a week (trust me on that one).

Ceramic is the Ultimate Shield

If your trim is still in good nick and you want to keep it that way through an Aussie summer, chuck a ceramic coating on it. Something like Gtechniq C4 Permanent Trim Restorer is brilliant. It bonds to the plastic and creates a UV barrier that handles 40 degree heat way better than any wax ever could. It's a bit more expensive, but your partner will thank you when you aren't out there every Sunday re-applying stuff.

Heat Guns are for Pros (and Risks)

You'll see blokes on YouTube using a heat gun to bring the oils to the surface. Honestly, I wouldn't bother. I made this mistake myself on a black Commodore years ago, it looks great for a month, then the plastic becomes brittle and grey's out even worse because you've literally cooked the last of the internal oils out of it. Stick to chemical restoration; it's much safer for the long run.
02

The Restoration Kit

What You'll Need

0/5
Stiff nylon detailing brush — For scrubbing out the red dirt and old wax.
Quality APC or Degreaser — Bowden's or Meguiar's work a treat.
Isopropyl Alcohol (IPA) wipe — To ensure the surface is 100% oil-free before coating.
Solution Finish or a Trim Ceramic — The actual 'fix' for the fading.
Microfibre applicators — Get the cheap ones, you'll be tossing them after using dyes.

Watch Out

Never apply trim restorers in direct midday sun. The plastic will be too hot, the product will flash (dry) instantly, and you'll end up with a streaky mess that's a nightmare to level out. Do it in the garage or a cool arvo. Also, keep the product off your paint! Use painters tape if you haven't got a steady hand.
03

Common Questions

Can I use peanut butter to fix faded trim?
Look, it works for about five minutes because of the oils, but then it goes rancid, smells like a compost bin, and attracts every ant in the neighbourhood. Keep the peanut butter for your toast and use a proper trim restorer.
How do I get dried wax off my black trim?
A pencil eraser is actually a cracker of a trick for this. Otherwise, use a dedicated wax remover and a soft brush. Don't just try to paint over it, or it'll look splotchy.
Will this survive a trip to the beach?
If you use a proper trim restorer or ceramic coating, yeah, no dramas. If you just use a cheap silicone dressing, the salt spray and sand will strip it off before you've even let the air out of your tyres.

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