DaveT435
Active member
- Jun 23, 2012
- 3,982
- 0
LMAO! no it's some sweet bread that she eats while she drives to work in the morning
Please tell me you took this picture right before she left for work lol
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LMAO! no it's some sweet bread that she eats while she drives to work in the morning
GAWD, I have seen some interiors with JUNK in them but THIS takes the cake. So much so that I may print it out and frame it with a statement saying "This will cost you extra" lol
OMG!! On the bright side it could make for some GREAT before and after pics!!
Sadly no this is after she came which I haven't clean the interior for like a week and a half
That's...only...a week...and a half...of...mess? My brain cannot compute this. Does she treat the house the same way? I try not to judge but dang that's disgusting.
On interiors that are filthy. Using common household products and a scrub may work out fine. Scrub the heck out of the stains then use a shop vac to extract the product. In the past I had to resort to engine cleaners to remove the spots.
That was the only product that worked. Many years ago some high end detailers used a mixture of hot water with tide laundry soap and gasoline to clean funky seats and carpets. That mixture worked well. A very unconventional mixture but it worked.
Whatever it takes to removes the spots would apply to your interior. Whatever you use just rinse it well with water then extract as much product with a shop vac and hope for the best.
I know guys will read this post and think about this guy is nuts now a days people worry about using ph. correct shampoos along with environmentally friendly products. In the end getting the interior spotless is the goal. Whatever it takes to accomplish that is the key. Use the least aggressive methods first and keep on plugging away until you find a product that works
If I was to clean that car I would start off with a conventional fabric shampoo. I would use the least aggressive methods first. If that did not work chances are steaming may or not work either. If it was my car I would resort to whatever it took to clean it up. To be real anything that would clean that up is the way to go.^^Is this guy for serious!?
If I was to clean that car I would start off with a conventional fabric shampoo. I would use the least aggressive methods first. If that did not work chances are steaming may or not work either. If it was my car I would resort to whatever it took to clean it up. To be real anything that would clean that up is the way to go.
These methods sure beat replacing the seat covers the way I see it no harm no foul. These methods beat the cost of replacing the seat covers. In the end if that mess would not cleanup I would replace the seat covers. Some engine cleaners are actually very strong aggressive cleaning shampoos that can be diluted down to work on fabrics and carpets. I am curious how would you try to clean up that mess?
Good adviceTo start, compressed air to remove loose stuff. Then brush & vac. Then start spotting.
Most engine cleaners are highly alkaline. Alkalines will set some stains. It's the butyl ether used for degreasing in your engine cleaner that is actually effective. I would start with a citric acid solution, then move to a pet urine remover (hydrogen peroxide, bacteria, enzyme), then a butyl ether spotting product only if OK'd by the owner. If necessary, go to an APC for actual soil/dirt stains and neutralize with citric acid solution. Use steam for each step and extract by whatever means makes sense for the area. But there's more than one way to crack that nut - if I were to use gasoline as you mentioned, I would use a few gallons and follow up with a match.