I have used the pet shop odor eliminators - they work well. I have also =
used a product called Odokill. You can get it pretty much anywhere. It =
is a concentrate that you can mix with water. I mixed it in with the =
solution in a hot water extraction carpet-cleaning machine to clean out =
a used car interior with pet and cigarette smells. You need a carpet =
cleaning machine with a stair/upholstery tool. It shoots the hot =
water/detergent/deodorizer mix into the carpet and sucks it right out =
again. You can rent them for a few hours pretty cheap. A shop-vac helps =
if you get sloppy with the solution.
I also have a buddy with a truck-mounted carpet cleaning machine and he =
does cars also (He's expensive though) he can even add a dye-matching =
material to the mix to "rejuvenate" faded carpets - looks unbelievable. =
See if any local Cleaning and Restoration pros (Pros, not kids who work =
for somebody else) can do this. My buddy will discount if you bring the =
car to him and are flexible about when he does it, so you could try to =
bargain.
I would also wash out all the cavities, and see if they got inside the =
seat foams.
Phil Vanner
'61 Midget
'93 Dalmatian
'96 Jack Russell Terrier
'92 21-Pound Grey Tabby Cat
(no rodents)
=20
-----Original Message-----
From: Gary A. Graham [SMTP:ggraham@edcen.ehhs.cmich.edu]
Sent: Monday, August 03, 1998 4:09 PM
To: Dan Pockrus
Cc: 'MG List'
Subject: Re: Rats!
Dan Pockrus wrote: , the smell is almost overpowering. Any hints?
Dan--
Check your local pet shop for a product called "Odor Ban" or something
similar. It's specifically designed for urine odor elimination. I've =
seen it
in Sam's Club, too.
Gary
74B
93 Irish Wolfhound
95 Dalmation
|