Why are vinyl seats no longer an option?

I had vinyl bench seats in my 77 Buick. Couldn't safely wear shorts in the summer. Those seats got hot in the sun! I remember coating the seats with Armor All and it made the seats so slippery. LOL. Cloth is my favorite. I find it very comfortable. Warm in the winter and not too hot in the summer.
 
Back in the day lots of cars came with vinyl seats as the base option. I personally would rather have that then cloth, but the reason I often end up going to a higher trim level is just to get the leather or leatherette seats.

I noticed that if you get an Lightning Pro model, it comes with vinyl seats. My XLT Lighting has cloth seats. I would prefer vinyl. Found that this paradigm is also true for some HD trucks, if you get the fleet stripper model, it comes with vinyl seats.

When did we decide that cloth is better? I want vinyl back, it's easy to clean and long lasting. And cheap.

But anyway....
Whats even more irritating is that in 1976 or so a number of Chevy models had no fewer than 14 colors and 6 or so interior colors and maybe a couple of different fabric options. In 2025 you'd think with so much automation that it would be easier/cheaper to get custom colors or fabrics.
 
I figured I would hate our "Softex" - which is Toyota's name. But we have dogs and no leather was offered. Turns out I love it. It doesn't get as hot - easy to clean. Guess we will see how it ages. Its 5 years now, but its garaged so everything still looks new.

Our 5th gen 4Runner has Softex. It's not like the vinyl that was in my parents cars growing up. That old vinyl was always uncomfortable, and a genuine hazard if parked in the Sun on a hot summer day.

From being on the 4Runner forums, the Softex is generally well liked. As you mention it's very durable, easy to clean, and we find it comfortable. People who have had their 4Runners for in some cases over 300k miles of hard use, have stated it still looks great, even when they've been subjected to dogs all that time.

I've had genuine factory leather in an older 3rd gen 4Runner, and FZJ80 Landcruiser. The real leather by comparison required lots of continuous care to keep it looking and feeling good, and it still wasn't as durable.

Now I do have some nice leather interiors in some of our current vehicles. But those vehicles were more expensive to begin with, and require constant conditioning, etc., to keep the leather in nice shape.
 
I like the fake leather and half leather etc. they put in vehicles now. My 05 Corvette had seats that were leather and some type of vinyl or imitation and they were great. Vehicles in today's world marked as leather are often times made of other materials. Real leather isn't what it's cracked up to be. Katskins sells seat covers that are really nice but I am not sure what it's actually made out of.
 
I figured I would hate our "Softex" - which is Toyota's name. But we have dogs and no leather was offered. Turns out I love it. It doesn't get as hot - easy to clean. Guess we will see how it ages. Its 5 years now, but its garaged so everything still looks new.
Agree. For what it is its a great seating surface!
 
On our Odyssey, the side panels of the leather seats were fake and after many years, the top layer peeled off the substrate, and then they looked awful.
 
Keep in mind, cloths differ.
There are varying degrees of grip, length and stiffness of knap .
There are also differing weaves.
Sis' '99 Jeep had a woven material -more of monofilament thread than fiber- with vinyl edges.
Those seats wore like iron.
 
I'll throw this in; if anybody remembers the Saab cars.
Out west in the hot climate pretty much by the mid 80s just about every one of those Saab cars on the road had disintegrating dashboards and the seats cracked with Foam basically disintegrating under your arse!
 
The "fake leather" is much much nicer than vinyl or leather.

Maybe, but the Mercedes and BMW offerings are vastly superior to natural leather, especially after two or three years.

It greatly depends on the leather being compared to. There's a huge range in quality, and thickness, which impacts how it wears and breaks-in. I've owned BMW's with both leather and non-leather and the leather was considerably nicer than the non-leather, but it was in a much more expensive car (M5).

Most automotive "leather" is relatively thin, and heavily coated, to provide strength, prevent abrasive wear and provide an easy to clean surface. Leathers with thinner coatings feel more natural, but are prone to staining and require treatment (like the "Laguna leather" in my Jeep, that comes with a leather care kit).

A quality leather seat is like a good ball glove: it's a heavier leather that breaks in and becomes more supple. It's not slippery like vinyl or pleathers, but you won't find this in most cars advertised as having "leather" interiors or seating surfaces. The optional leather in my Jeep was a $7,000 option and it's nice, but it's not as nice as the leather in the M5.
 
You were able to get vinyl seats and a "rubber" floor on Ram 1500 classic pickups right up to ~2024 as far I know. Not sure if this carried through on the 5th gen Ram 1500s or other light trucks.
 
It greatly depends on the leather being compared to. There's a huge range in quality, and thickness, which impacts how it wears and breaks-in. I've owned BMW's with both leather and non-leather and the leather was considerably nicer than the non-leather, but it was in a much more expensive car (M5).

Most automotive "leather" is relatively thin, and heavily coated, to provide strength, prevent abrasive wear and provide an easy to clean surface. Leathers with thinner coatings feel more natural, but are prone to staining and require treatment (like the "Laguna leather" in my Jeep, that comes with a leather care kit).

A quality leather seat is like a good ball glove: it's a heavier leather that breaks in and becomes more supple. It's not slippery like vinyl or pleathers, but you won't find this in most cars advertised as having "leather" interiors or seating surfaces. The optional leather in my Jeep was a $7,000 option and it's nice, but it's not as nice as the leather in the M5.
I too have had all of the above, and agree that there are some great "super premium" leathers in the BMW mix. There are also some coated leathers (Acura, Honda and others) that are essentially bury the leather in a coating of vinyl. Vat dyed leather is more the norm for the German brands. My point is that Sensatec from BMW and MBTex from Mercedes look great day one, and still look great decades down the road. They can be wiped off with a damp cloth, and have a great, uniform look and feel. The better the leather is, the sooner it wears. While there might be a period where the patina is perfect, leather essentially degrades over time and eventually disintegrates.
 
I had vinyl bench seats in my 77 Buick. Couldn't safely wear shorts in the summer. Those seats got hot in the sun! I remember coating the seats with Armor All and it made the seats so slippery. LOL. Cloth is my favorite. I find it very comfortable. Warm in the winter and not too hot in the summer.
Back before Armor All we would use lemon Pledge....
 
I too have had all of the above, and agree that there are some great "super premium" leathers in the BMW mix. There are also some coated leathers (Acura, Honda and others) that are essentially bury the leather in a coating of vinyl.
Yes, that's unfortunately the norm for most non-premium leathers, they are effectively vinyl, the coating is so thick.
Vat dyed leather is more the norm for the German brands. My point is that Sensatec from BMW and MBTex from Mercedes look great day one, and still look great decades down the road. They can be wiped off with a damp cloth, and have a great, uniform look and feel. The better the leather is, the sooner it wears. While there might be a period where the patina is perfect, leather essentially degrades over time and eventually disintegrates.
Yes, no argument that the vinyl is easier to clean. I've never had a vinyl interior vehicle come with a vinyl care kit.

Vinyl of course also wears and can be vulnerable to UV degradation. My M5 was a 2001, we also bought a high mileage 2000 328i (I will add that my sister's 2003 330i has aged better inside than the 328i did). The M5's seats held up significantly better than the material BMW used on the 328i, which, on the driver-side, got hard and cracked:
328i-02.webp

Passenger side for comparison:
328i-05.webp

M5 seats:
M5Interior20.webp


The M5 seats are still my benchmark for quality and comfort.

Our old Expedition Eddie Bauer also had leather seats. They were the more typical lower quality leather and the bolster on the driver side split once it got over about 150,000 miles. Seating surface held up fine however.

Will be interesting to see how the "Laguna Leather" seats in the SRT hold up compared to the BMW ones.
 
2024 Kia Forte ... 100% "vinyl". Synthetic seating used to get scorching hot in the sun. The new stuff behaves much like high-end leather and doesn't burn flesh, nor does it get hard in the cold.

Screenshot_20240605-182608.webp
 
Most automotive "leather" is relatively thin, and heavily coated, to provide strength, prevent abrasive wear and provide an easy to clean surface. Leathers with thinner coatings feel more natural, but are prone to staining and require treatment (like the "Laguna leather" in my Jeep, that comes with a leather care kit).

A quality leather seat is like a good ball glove: it's a heavier leather that breaks in and becomes more supple. It's not slippery like vinyl or pleathers, but you won't find this in most cars advertised as having "leather" interiors or seating surfaces. The optional leather in my Jeep was a $7,000 option and it's nice, but it's not as nice as the leather in the M5.
I find most automotive leather is finished to resemble vinyl.

Agree, leather like a ball glove or a saddle would be nice. Like a Ford King Ranch. Otherwise I rather like the fake leather Tesla uses. The MBTEX in my 2009 too closely resembled leather trying to be vinyl.
 
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