Forums » Grassroots Motorsports » Suede Steering Wheel for the Street?
  • Woody

    June 3, 2011 8:41 a.m. Woody SuperDork

    I've been looking at some aftermarket steering wheels and I often see the leather ones tagged as "Street" and suede ones as "Race".

    Do suede wheels wear out too quickly for a street car?

  • failboat

    June 3, 2011 9:03 a.m. failboat Reader

    I am only speculating...usually in a race car you are wearing gloves. In a street car you are not, allowing the oils/sweat from your skin to get all over the wheel.

    I cant imagine suede will hold up in the long run to that.

    boosh.

  • mad_machine

    June 3, 2011 9:55 a.m. mad_machine SuperDork

    can always clean suede.. but again, I too am speculating

    Be careful of your words, for someone will agree with them. Be careful of your conduct, for someone will imitate it. -Leih Tsu

  • June 3, 2011 9:58 a.m. mndsm SuperDork

    Get leather wheel, get cheap fake suede from fabric store, cover? Rip and replace as needed. Last time I check the stuff was like $7/yard if that.

    Go fast or go broke.

  • 1988RedT2

    June 3, 2011 10:44 a.m. 1988RedT2 Dork

    Clearly, this is the way to go!

    http://www.amazon.com/Pink-Shag-Steering-Wheel-Cover/dp/B000SM14YQ

  • ansonivan

    June 3, 2011 12:04 p.m. ansonivan Dork

    Unless you wear gloves constantly the suede will become loaded and matted with oil from your hands. Not really practical for a daily driver.

  • chandlerGTi

    June 3, 2011 12:41 p.m. chandlerGTi New Reader

    I never had a problem with that. I had a suede mom in my 190e 2.3 16v and it wore just fine.

  • racerdave600

    June 3, 2011 3:02 p.m. racerdave600 HalfDork

    My old Momo suede Monte Carlo (Type 72?) was starting to show wear from driving it to and from only a few events. The oils matt it down it seems. There's probably a way to clean it, but for the street, leather is the way to go.

  • Travis_K

    June 3, 2011 7:23 p.m. Travis_K SuperDork

    I have also seen that they eventually start to look nasty. In contrast I have a momo wheel I just got from the junkyard dated 4/83 with smooth leather and it still looks nice. If you like the momo comptition wheel (not suede) I have one I want to sell also.

  • novaderrik

    June 3, 2011 8:19 p.m. novaderrik Dork

    1988RedT2 wrote: Clearly, this is the way to go! http://www.amazon.com/Pink-Shag-Steering-Wheel-Cover/dp/B000SM14YQ

    i prefer the fake leather covers that have the built in strap that you wrap around the wheel to tie them on.. do they make them any more?

  • 1988RedT2

    June 4, 2011 7:04 a.m. 1988RedT2 Dork

    Start a thread about leather, and you get an erotic canoe!

  • mad_machine

    June 4, 2011 9:56 a.m. mad_machine SuperDork

    wow.. it's a vertible fleet of canoes today

    Be careful of your words, for someone will agree with them. Be careful of your conduct, for someone will imitate it. -Leih Tsu

  • 2.0dohc

    June 4, 2011 10:03 a.m. 2.0dohc Reader

    1988RedT2 wrote: Start a thread about leather, and you get an erotic canoe!

    Just think what we would get if we talked about leather shift knobs.....

    ever try to heel/toe a miata while wearing combat boots?

  • June 4, 2011 11:42 a.m. BigD New Reader

    I've gone through several different Momo wheels over the years and my first was the suede Champion. After a year, year and a half of getting into the car with wet (rain) or sweaty hands, the suede looked like black cork.

    For a street car, stick to leather. I've never had an Alcantara wheel, maybe those are more durable than suede.

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