Interior Exterior
Q:
Juices from my lunch leaked out of the tuperware and onto my passenger seat. I wiped off the juice the best I can, but the smell still lingers. Any recommendations on what to I pick up to get rid of it?
Something basic I can maybe pick up from the grocery store? Or are my passengers doomed to have a nasty smelling butt after riding in my car?
Thanks!
A:
Juices from my lunch leaked out of the tuperware and onto my passenger seat. I wiped off the juice the best I can, but the smell still lingers. Any recommendations on what to I pick up to get rid of it?
Something basic I can maybe pick up from the grocery store? Or are my passengers doomed to have a nasty smelling butt after riding in my car?
Thanks!
I'd be worried about your passengers having a nasty smelling butt before riding in your car.
A:
Get a steamcleaner with a handheld attachment. Alternately, get a wet-dry vac and use soap and water to clean the surface, soak it pretty thoroughly. Use the wet/dry vac to get as much up as you can, squashing down the foam to wring it out. Then set up a fan to blow directly on the seat to finish drying it out. Probably will take overnight to be fully dry.
Cade
A:
Do you have leather?
A good leather cleaner should help. Make sure you get the creases. They are very deep in the Elise seats.
A:
When you get as much of the juice out as you can with the above methods, spray the seat with Febreze. It is great at removing odors and doesn't replace them (cover them up) with "air freshener" smells.