What our buyers say

Hello Capt. Tolley
I got this lovely 1986 Mercedes 230E cheap because of the habit it had of blowing water through the fan vents after heavy rain. I'd put up with it for a year or two and even had the body restored – it is such a nice example; but I still had an ensuite shower on rainy mornings, and have been through a couple of car stereos that weren't rated for wet use. After asking no end of Mercedes websites for solutions and hearing horror stories about dismantling the sunroof, etc., experiments with buckets of water narrowed the leak down to the windscreen seal. Yes, you guessed it. Apart from putting an end to two years of low-level anxiety, the Creeping Crack Cure makes the rubber seal look like new. Three quid and it's ready for another 20 years.
Many thanks for a great product (and it worked on the conservatory too).
Justin Ward

Dear Capt. Tolley
‘Twas with no little delight that I saw the enclosed in Boating Business, and to learn that Capt. Tolley’s Creeping Crack Cure was afloat and well.
You may remember that in 1961 (I think) you supplied a few samples to Robin Richards and myself aboard Lucent at Hollowshore, before we yachted off to Fiji. From that day to the day six years later when we disembarked in Suva, Capt. Tolley’s Creeping Crack Cure was the means of keeping the sea and rain in its proper place above deck. Apart from the indecent rush south, Lucent spent these years between 30° north and 30° south, (a sunny belt, you will agree), and thanks to Capt Tolley’s Creeping Crack Cure any deck leak occasioned by violent vertical sunshine was stopped – for good.
Yours sincerely Roger Jameson

 

Dear Capt. Tolley
Our exploration sailing vessel Vagabond’elle is a 36-year old wooden motor-sailor. We had a recurrent problem of leakage through the corks topping the screws that maintain the teak planking of the deck. Until we tried Creeping Crack Cure! We crawled on the deck for several days and injected the product to seal the corks. We got definitely rid of any leak from the deck and spared the big money that would have cost the replacement of the planking. Thanks to you, Capt. Tolley!
Janusz Kurbiel

Dear Capt. Tolley
I thought you would like to see what I have mended with Creeping Crack Cure. It is a railway signal lantern salvaged around 1970 by me from a disused railway.

[photograph of salvaged signal lantern

My son Thomas, then 10, found it. (He is now the Principal Investigator at the Grayrigg Derailment.)
I gave it to my son Douglas (aged 7) for his birthday, and now I am doing up the inside of the lantern itself, which incidently still works. Many thanks!
Yours Professor Edwards

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