Alcantara or Leather?
Discussion
Any opinions on whether one is preferable to the other?
I guess Alcantara is perhaps more "sporty" and leather more "luxury" but is one more durable than the other?
Also, on cars with the Nappa leather the covering on the seat base seems to no longer look "tight" even on cars with few miles.
I'm currently considering a car with leather and don't want to come to regret it!
I guess Alcantara is perhaps more "sporty" and leather more "luxury" but is one more durable than the other?
Also, on cars with the Nappa leather the covering on the seat base seems to no longer look "tight" even on cars with few miles.
I'm currently considering a car with leather and don't want to come to regret it!
drcarrera said:
I have leather in all my current cars and I can't say sweatiness is a particular issue! Unless I've been playing sport - in which case I have a temporary seat cover ...
Or is the air con in Mclarens particularly bad?!
Aircon is fine. Hey, you asked and were assumedly neutral on the topic - though it now sounds like you want leather.. Alcantara for keeping your backside tethered in the twisties, for looking like new for much longer and the ability to make cool patterns after vacuuming. Or is the air con in Mclarens particularly bad?!
I’m sure you we can discuss the relative value and ethics of either choice in a long thread but I assume you are asking from the perspective of how they will work in practice.
Or you can compromise as in my case.
Edited by 12pack on Thursday 20th May 14:42
12pack said:
drcarrera said:
I have leather in all my current cars and I can't say sweatiness is a particular issue! Unless I've been playing sport - in which case I have a temporary seat cover ...
Or is the air con in Mclarens particularly bad?!
Aircon is fine. Hey, you asked and were assumedly neutral on the topic - though it now sounds like you want leather.. Alcantara for keeping your backside tethered in twisties, for looking like new for much longer and the ability to make cool patterns after vacuuming. Or is the air con in Mclarens particularly bad?!
I’m sure you we can discuss the relative value and ethics of either choice in a long thread but I assume you are asking from the perspective of how they will work in practice.
Edited by 12pack on Thursday 20th May 14:18
Aesthetically I would probably just lean towards Alcantara (or a mix of two as in your photos) but not enough to rule out a car with leather if all other specs are OK. I would say that the leather seats in my Vantage were quite different in feel to those in my current Porsche - perhaps the former was Nappa and the latter not? The Vantage seats were a tad slippery but the Porsche's are fine.
I'm looking at 570s by the way.
Edited by drcarrera on Thursday 20th May 14:51
my 2007 superleggera has alcantara seats and pretty much the entire dashboard
at 56k and 14 years it's still immaculate, better than a lot of leather contemporaries tbh
i was cynical back in 2007 and so did a little research : the stuff's successfully used in everything from boats to outdoor furniture to hospital seats
at 56k and 14 years it's still immaculate, better than a lot of leather contemporaries tbh
i was cynical back in 2007 and so did a little research : the stuff's successfully used in everything from boats to outdoor furniture to hospital seats
belfry said:
I bought some alcantara on a roll to cover a transmission tunnel in a 911.
It is really cheap, being a synthetic mixture of polyester and polyurethane. So I would want to be careful how much extra is charged for this polyester based material over leather.
It is really cheap, being a synthetic mixture of polyester and polyurethane. So I would want to be careful how much extra is charged for this polyester based material over leather.
Genuine alcantara is far from cheap to buy, i wouldnt be suprised if it was more expenisve than most leathers.
davek_964 said:
I don't have any issues with the leather in mine.
I also own an 18 year old Cayenne with ~110k miles on it, and the leather in that still looks virtually new - despite absolute neglect from me over the last 8 years. So I don't think leather really needs to age badly.
Thanks Davek. I've seen some with drivers seats like in this photo (though not as bad) where it's no longer taught. If they're like this after a few thousand miles I'm a little worried what they'd be like a few years later ... Alcantara doesn't seem to have the same issue unless it's just not as noticable.I also own an 18 year old Cayenne with ~110k miles on it, and the leather in that still looks virtually new - despite absolute neglect from me over the last 8 years. So I don't think leather really needs to age badly.
Alcantara immediately makes me think of my Grannies worn bath mat from the 1970’s, particularly when door cards and dash are smothered in the stuff. Just seems to suck the life and light out of an interior when over done. Possibly on seat centre, but for me nothing beats a nicely patinaed quality leather.....
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