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I had that on my Civic and my old Saturn. Mojo is right, polish and wax work the best. A plastic cleaner made for the ABS style rough plastic on bumpers would look greasy and not stay on very well. Start with a buff and polish to get the black back then move to wax.
You can also try some oil, not car oil, but peanut butter or vegetable oil to let it soak in.
On trim pieces like that, you can't go wrong with #40. Just apply it, work it in, buff it off with a clean mf. Cleans it up like new without being greasy.
"No man is so foolish but he may sometimes give another good counsel, and no man so wise that he may not easily err if he takes no other counsel than his own. He that is taught only by himself has a fool for a master." --Hunter S. Thompson
I dont understand why but all the non porous plastic you are refering to takes nxt tech wax like nothing else. it is awsome. Just try 1 layer of nxt and then take a look. Ive used GC and other waxes but for some reason this stuff is awsome. Let me note one other thing i never use liqued wax, i always use paste, and i believe most waxes or polishes that come in liqued or a paste, the paste is more concentrated and it goes way farther than liqued, and i have found the nxt paste outperforms the nxt liqued hands down.i know alot of people dont even give that any thought but i did a long time ago and i still do. No matter what, to make a compound liqued u must add something to it. This is all the help i can give you , just like the other 2 members told you treat it like a paint job. This is only my opinion....Good luck
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