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lib
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Nov 27, 2005 7:41 am Post subject:
Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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What is a good neutralizer/remover of the musty odor of a 20+ year stored
car?I have cleaned/ vacuumed the entire interior, but haven't shampooed the
carpets. It was stored in a garage under a car cover. It is now in a garage
with the windows down and will probably be there for another 6 months.
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WayneC
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Nov 27, 2005 9:08 am Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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lib wrote:
| Quote: | What is a good neutralizer/remover of the musty odor of a 20+ year stored
car?I have cleaned/ vacuumed the entire interior, but haven't shampooed the
carpets. It was stored in a garage under a car cover. It is now in a garage
with the windows down and will probably be there for another 6 months.
Shampooing's gotta help, and maybe a fan to dry and move air through it |
for an extended period. Your Mom used baking soda to remove odors from
the refrigerator. |
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StingRay
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Nov 27, 2005 9:12 am Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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"lib" <libaala@alamedanot.net> wrote in message
news:4389104a$0$27773$2c56edd9@news.cablerocket.com...
| Quote: | What is a good neutralizer/remover of the musty odor of a 20+ year stored
car?I have cleaned/ vacuumed the entire interior, but haven't shampooed
the carpets. It was stored in a garage under a car cover. It is now in a
garage with the windows down and will probably be there for another 6
months.
|
lib, a buddy of mine recently used Febreze Antimicrobial spray in his '55
Chevy and he tells me it worked wonders overnight. I just looked it up on
the web and here's a link,
http://www.homemadesimple.com/febreze/products/antimicrobial.shtml
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Dennis Willson
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Nov 27, 2005 9:12 am Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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lib wrote:
| Quote: | What is a good neutralizer/remover of the musty odor of a 20+ year stored
car?I have cleaned/ vacuumed the entire interior, but haven't shampooed the
carpets. It was stored in a garage under a car cover. It is now in a garage
with the windows down and will probably be there for another 6 months.
Many professionals use Ozone. You get (rent, borrow, etc...) an ozone |
generator and put in the car with the windows all up and let it sit over
night. It will not have any odors the next day. Works wonders.
Dennis |
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Bill Sohl
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Nov 27, 2005 8:32 pm Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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"WayneC" <WayneC@linkline.moc> wrote in message
news:11oi8q23d3k68d9@corp.supernews.com...
| Quote: | lib wrote:
What is a good neutralizer/remover of the musty odor of a 20+ year stored
car?I have cleaned/ vacuumed the entire interior, but haven't shampooed
the carpets. It was stored in a garage under a car cover. It is now in a
garage with the windows down and will probably be there for another 6
months.
Shampooing's gotta help, and maybe a fan to dry and move air through it
for an extended period. Your Mom used baking soda to remove odors from
from the refrigerator.
|
The Arm & Hammer brand baking soda can be bought in any
supermarket. Cheap too. Sprinkle it on the carpet, floor and
upholstery, let it sit a few days and then vacuum it.
You can then also leave a bowl or plate of the stuff
on the floor in the car for long term storage.
Cheers,
Bill S. |
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C. E. White
Guest
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Posted:
Mon Nov 28, 2005 2:39 am Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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"Dennis Willson" <giganews@taz-mania.com> wrote in message
news:V9ydnQU_MOUy-RTenZ2dnUVZ_tidnZ2d@baytsp.com...
| Quote: | Many professionals use Ozone. You get (rent, borrow, etc...) an ozone
generator and put in the car with the windows all up and let it sit over
night. It will not have any odors the next day. Works wonders.
|
Ozone is tough on rubber and some plastics. I'd be careful about using it in
high concentratons. "Professional" often use product that are not good for
cars in the long term becasue they work wonders in the short term.
Ed |
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RicSeyler
Guest
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Posted:
Mon Nov 28, 2005 5:03 am Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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Huh...... good catch!! Makes prefect sense.
C. E. White wrote:
| Quote: | "Dennis Willson" <giganews@taz-mania.com> wrote in message
news:V9ydnQU_MOUy-RTenZ2dnUVZ_tidnZ2d@baytsp.com...
Many professionals use Ozone. You get (rent, borrow, etc...) an ozone
generator and put in the car with the windows all up and let it sit over
night. It will not have any odors the next day. Works wonders.
Ozone is tough on rubber and some plastics. I'd be careful about using it in
high concentratons. "Professional" often use product that are not good for
cars in the long term becasue they work wonders in the short term.
Ed
|
--
Ric Seyler
Online Racing: RicSeyler
GPL Handicap 6.35
ricseyler@SPAMgulf.net
http://www.pcola.gulf.net/~ricseyler
remove -SPAM- from email address
--------------------------------------
"Homer no function beer well without."
- H.J. Simpson |
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CF
Guest
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PeterD
Guest
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Posted:
Mon Nov 28, 2005 8:45 pm Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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On Sun, 27 Nov 2005 14:32:24 GMT, "Bill Sohl"
<billsohl@mindspring.com> wrote:
| Quote: | The Arm & Hammer brand baking soda can be bought in any
supermarket. Cheap too. Sprinkle it on the carpet, floor and
upholstery, let it sit a few days and then vacuum it.
You can then also leave a bowl or plate of the stuff
on the floor in the car for long term storage.
|
Basically a good idea, but don't sprinkle on the carpet directly,
instead lay a single sheet of newspaper down and sprinkle on the
paper, then it is *much* easier to clean up aftwards! <bg> |
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Robin Banks
Guest
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Posted:
Mon Nov 28, 2005 11:31 pm Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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On Mon, 28 Nov 2005 09:45:34 -0500, PeterD <peter2@hipson.net> wrote:
| Quote: | On Sun, 27 Nov 2005 14:32:24 GMT, "Bill Sohl"
billsohl@mindspring.com> wrote:
The Arm & Hammer brand baking soda can be bought in any
supermarket. Cheap too. Sprinkle it on the carpet, floor and
upholstery, let it sit a few days and then vacuum it.
You can then also leave a bowl or plate of the stuff
on the floor in the car for long term storage.
Basically a good idea, but don't sprinkle on the carpet directly,
instead lay a single sheet of newspaper down and sprinkle on the
paper, then it is *much* easier to clean up aftwards! <bg
|
I agree with "not on the carpet", since it can sift it's way through the
carpet and sit, like sand, on your floorboards. Add a little moisture, and
you're asking for rust.
Unless you have dark carpet, I'm not sure I'd use newspaper though. The ink
might transfer to the carpet/upholstery. Plain brown wrapping paper or some
other unprinted paper might be a better idea.
--
~~R.Banks |
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lib
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Nov 29, 2005 5:22 am Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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Thanx for the good info. I appreciate it- Lib
"WayneC" <WayneC@linkline.moc> wrote in message
news:11oi8q23d3k68d9@corp.supernews.com...
| Quote: | lib wrote:
What is a good neutralizer/remover of the musty odor of a 20+ year stored
car?I have cleaned/ vacuumed the entire interior, but haven't shampooed
the carpets. It was stored in a garage under a car cover. It is now in a
garage with the windows down and will probably be there for another 6
months.
Shampooing's gotta help, and maybe a fan to dry and move air through it
for an extended period. Your Mom used baking soda to remove odors from the
refrigerator. |
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Peter Daly
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Nov 29, 2005 5:37 am Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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| Ferbreze or however it is spelled works pretty well. |
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Tom in Missouri
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Nov 29, 2005 9:12 am Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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Sprinkle it right into the carpet. Let it sit a couple of days. Then
vacuum it out.
Then get a Rug Doctor and shampoo the carpets and anything cloth in the
interior. You can also do the leather seats with the Rug Doctor but saddle
soap and leather condition them afterwards.
Do the Rug Doctor on a hot, sunny day and leave it sit open to air out and
dry well or you will have mildew.
What is causing the smell has to be killed off and removed, and a little
baking soda in a bowl ain't gonna do it.
The Rug Doctor won't rust out the floors anyway. Similar machines have been
used in high dollar antique car collections for years, places like Harrods',
and they would know what keeps them and what destroys them. (BTW, they drove
every car on a regular basis, they didn't leave them sit.)
And second, real Corvettes don't have metal floors, so they ain't gonna
rust.
"Robin Banks" <rbn_banks@REMOVEhotmail.com> wrote in message
news:qkfmo197h88afu11evu5kp36rc1lpa5hrn@4ax.com...
| Quote: | On Mon, 28 Nov 2005 09:45:34 -0500, PeterD <peter2@hipson.net> wrote:
On Sun, 27 Nov 2005 14:32:24 GMT, "Bill Sohl"
billsohl@mindspring.com> wrote:
The Arm & Hammer brand baking soda can be bought in any
supermarket. Cheap too. Sprinkle it on the carpet, floor and
upholstery, let it sit a few days and then vacuum it.
You can then also leave a bowl or plate of the stuff
on the floor in the car for long term storage.
Basically a good idea, but don't sprinkle on the carpet directly,
instead lay a single sheet of newspaper down and sprinkle on the
paper, then it is *much* easier to clean up aftwards! <bg
I agree with "not on the carpet", since it can sift it's way through the
carpet and sit, like sand, on your floorboards. Add a little moisture,
and
you're asking for rust.
Unless you have dark carpet, I'm not sure I'd use newspaper though. The
ink
might transfer to the carpet/upholstery. Plain brown wrapping paper or
some
other unprinted paper might be a better idea.
--
~~R.Banks |
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g inski
Guest
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Posted:
Wed Nov 30, 2005 9:12 am Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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go to your kroger or alb or swy and by a big can of coffee
sprinkle it on the carpets and seats
make sure nothing is wet
vac up the next day week month
odor will be gone
On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 17:41:13 -0800, "lib" <libaala@alamedanot.net>
wrote:
| Quote: | What is a good neutralizer/remover of the musty odor of a 20+ year stored
car?I have cleaned/ vacuumed the entire interior, but haven't shampooed the
carpets. It was stored in a garage under a car cover. It is now in a garage
with the windows down and will probably be there for another 6 months.
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MrC1
Guest
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Posted:
Thu Dec 01, 2005 4:12 am Post subject:
Re: Remove odor from stored roadster? |
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I've also found that dryer sheets left in the car on a hot day can do
wonders. Probably not the best solution, but it's another option.
"g inski" <greginski@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:jd9qo1hfcq2oi4cafphga7u307gktl0f2o@4ax.com...
| Quote: | go to your kroger or alb or swy and by a big can of coffee
sprinkle it on the carpets and seats
make sure nothing is wet
vac up the next day week month
odor will be gone
On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 17:41:13 -0800, "lib" <libaala@alamedanot.net
wrote:
What is a good neutralizer/remover of the musty odor of a 20+ year stored
car?I have cleaned/ vacuumed the entire interior, but haven't shampooed
the
carpets. It was stored in a garage under a car cover. It is now in a
garage
with the windows down and will probably be there for another 6 months.
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