cardude2000
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2015
- Posts
- 2,931
- Reaction score
- 1,037
Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
That's how genuine leather behaves, my 1970s and 1980s Buicks had even more creases and they were fine twenty plus years later. Keep it clean and treat it well. If you want smooth, get plastic or some shrink wrapped crap.
It's not horrible, but my wife noticed it right away
My Denali steering wheel has almost zero creasing (see picture). The one he is showing is a sloppy mess.
If he wants a steering wheel with the quality of an 80’s Buick that’s his call. But it’s certainly not how they are supposed to look from the factory.
These are complaints born out of ignorance, nothing more.
Do any of y'all work with leather?
Let's see, my 1988 F-450 Super Duty had creases, as did my '79 through '87 Buicks. My '85 Sedan De Ville and '88 and '92 Coupe De Villes and a I once drove a Honda minivan that had creases everywhere but not sure if it was real leather. And every Oldsmobile too looked like those pictures.
Phony leather will lay much smoother.
Well said. The steering wheel is as aesthetic as it is functional to the vehicle. The OP photo is an example how it shouldn't look and the Denali as how it should. I have numerous leather holsters and oddly enough, no wrinkles. Just because it may be difficult to produce, is no excuse for poor quality.We get it. All of your ‘nice’ car experience is with a single manufacturer. And it’s GM.
Wake us when your fanboy rants are over and you’re ready to address the pictures that show a genuine Denali leather steering wheel as its supposed to be (smooth and flat) and the wrinkled mess of a steering wheel the OP posted.
His steering wheel isn’t the way it’s supposed to be. Full stop.