Old Car Interior Plastics Can Turn Sticky And Gross. Here’s How I Fixed It In My BMW

Sticky Bmw Interior Ts
ADVERTISEMENT

Soft-touch interior plastics were supposed to be a good thing. Instead of suffering hard plastic knobs and handles like schmucks, we would be coddled by luxurious, soft touchpoints that felt great in our hands. And yet, for many it has been a curse. As years pass, the soft-touch plastics turn to mush, and sticky mush at that. Interiors ruined, along with your clothes if the plastic goo really gets everywhere.

I suffered this very problem in my otherwise totally perfect E90 BMW 320D. I recently got it back on the road, and the crankshaft pulley has been holding up great. Less great: the (perfectly valid) complaints from the passenger seat. My girlfriend has never liked the Beemer due to the sticky passenger door handle. The door pull is overmolded with soft-touch plastic, and was undoubtedly pleasant to touch when new. By the time I bought the car, the overmold was dissolving into a sticky mess that made using the door a pretty icky proposition. Something had to be done.

The typical solution is to remove the door handle and replace it with a new aftermarket part. That’s all well and good, but it costs $50 and you have to wait for shipping. I only like spending $50 on fun things, like Lego trains and Lego train tracks. Also, you have to take off the door card to get to the bolts, and I fucking hate taking off door cards. Naturally, then, I spent six months ignoring this problem until fellow journalist Kyle Hyatt mentioned to me that he knew a much cheaper way to fix this. Within the hour I was in the car furiously working away with the energy of the possessed. Stick around for the satisfying removal of goop.

The Problem: Thermoplastic Elastomers

This problem all comes down to thermoplastic elastomers, or TPEs. Soft, rubbery-feeling, and easy to manufacture with, a layer of TPE can be applied over a hard plastic part to create a more premium-feeling experience for the end user. The problem is that TPEs are not very hardy out in the real world. UV exposure, heat, and oils can all degrade TPEs until they turn into a gloppy, sticky goop, and there’s no going back. They’re a widely-reviled part of many automotive interiors today, as they feel great in a new car but eventually turn horrible as the vehicle ages.

Basically, automakers took a material that eventually melts when subjected to heat and the oils produced by human skin, put that material all over the car-interior bits that you actually touch and are routinely heated by the sun. Bravo, gang, bravo.

The Solution: Isopropyl Alcohol

The E90 BMW is particularly well-known for suffering this problem on the interior door pulls. On my car, it’s primarily the front passenger door that has suffered this plague, as the driver’s side uses a different design that omits the soft-touch layer. While the typical solution is to replace the part, Kyle explained that there was a way to clean the offending material instead. This involved using a prodigious dose of isopropyl alcohol.

Basically, the isopropyl alcohol acts as a solvent and very rapidly breaks down the TPE. This allows it to be removed more easily and takes away any remaining sticky residue. I had a bottle of “99% strength” isopropyl sitting on my desk, so I figured I might as well give it a shot. “This will be great!” I exclaimed to nobody in particular. I had dreams of spraying on a light spritz of isopropyl and wiping off the TPE in short order, leaving a nice new door handle.

Such folly.

Kyle wasn’t wrong; isopropyl alcohol does ease removal. However, it doesn’t dissolve it into a liquid you can just wipe off. Instead, it just kind of softens it a bit. “Mechanical removal,” as is the industry term, is still required. For me, that meant digging away with a screwdriver, peeling off strip after strip of this horrible black gunk.

The area where the soft-touch had already turned goopy wasn’t so bad. I was able to wipe away with some isopropyl alcohol on paper towels and I got down to the hard plastic handle underneath without too much trouble. The bigger problem was the upper, lower, and back sections of the handle. These areas hadn’t degraded much, and still had a largely-intact soft touch coating on them. It was kind of an all or nothing situation, though. If I wanted to remove the sticky part, I had to remove all of it.

I repeatedly doused the “good” parts of the handle in isopropyl until it too started to free up, then began painstakingly removing it chunk by chunk. Once I got most of the large parts off the front, I grabbed an old scrap of aluminum shower rail and used it like a scraper to remove large pieces from the back. Once the bulk of it was gone, I repeatedly wiped down the whole handle with a paper towel heavily soaked in isopropyl to remove as much sticky residue as possible.

This took about an hour in total, just to do one door handle. At the end, I was left with an okay-looking hard plastic door handle with some scuff marks from my judicious screwdriver use. A plastic scraper might have been a better idea but, you know, whatever. The final look is a bit glossy but mostly looks like it’s meant to be there.

Ghakxyvaoaa5htz

The final result has some scuff marks from the screwdriver and the isopropyl alcohol left a light haze. Note the divot in the handle—that’s intentional from BMW, to help the soft-touch overmolding grab on to the hard plastic part. Ultimately, it’s an improvement, though not as good as a brand-new replacement part, and it probably would have taken a similar amount of time to swap in a new door pull.

20240223 163040 (1)

If I went through this again, I’d probably just spend the $50 and yank the door card and get it over with. But for parts that are harder to replace, isopropyl alcohol can be a very useful tool.

In any case, I can now invite my girlfriend and other potential passengers into my car without fear that they’ll complain about the gross sticky door handle. That’s a win. Oh, and my crankshaft pulley bolts are still fine. Thanks for asking!

Image credits: Lewin Day 

About the Author

View All My Posts

60 thoughts on “Old Car Interior Plastics Can Turn Sticky And Gross. Here’s How I Fixed It In My BMW

  1. I just remembered I had to do this on my old 2007 G35 (sold it years ago), but just for the steering wheel bezel. Removed the gunky stuff and there was the same-colored plastic under it, so nobody even noticed.

  2. I’m sorry to say, friend, that I don’t think you can leave it looking like that. It might be better than before, but that looks pretty bad. Definitely needs to at least be sanded to a consistent finish or something.

  3. The weird thing is that not all TPE seems to age like this.

    I have some 10 year old+ Makita LXT power tools that have basically been treated the same as you’d find in a car- Heat, cold, dust, and clean(ish) human hands.

    They have been used regularly, but the TPE over-mold is fine- If anything, it has hardened a bit, and taken on a slight ‘polish’.

    Some combination of ATF, oil, solvents + physical abuse will eventually cause power tool over-mold to soften and delaminate, but definitely not the same passive ‘melting’ as these automotive trim parts.

    Not sure what the chemical differences are, but it seems shocking auto manufacturers won’t aim for something with more stability.

    1. You would be surprised (or not) how often companies will spec the wrong material even after an expert tells them they shouldn’t use it (and usually tells them what they should use instead).

  4. Add leather? Upholstery shops may have scraps you can buy and cut to size and glue on. 3M sells cans of “Super77” spray glue. Very effective. Result will be amazing. Remember to pick a black leather because this is a high friction/use area

  5. A weekend with a couple of chunks of aluminum, a grinder, some files, Emory cloth and polish and you’d have some dandy hand milled aluminum door pulls.

  6. Now, you repaint with plasti-dip, and it looks more or less like new. Did that with… an ashtray cover maybe? in my ’02 330i several years ago. Did not have high hopes, and was thoroughly surprised at how well it came out. Only downside was the rest of the interior didn’t look as nice.

  7. I just used the same thing on the handle of my Porsche umbrella (came with the Boxster), sadly the vinyl case for it flaked to bits but the umbrella itself is great now

  8. I think alcohol was the fix I used on pair of early 90s binoculars that had a soft coating that went bad. Fortunately none of my cars have the stuff

  9. Even though the end result is kinda ugly, it was the right call. The new part would eventually fail the same way, the best place for TPE is in hell.
    Wrap that on some nice material, or even craft a new one out of wood, the only way now is up!

Leave a Reply