Is there a product, consumer or professional, to use to get the smoke
stink out of a car? The car is sitting over winter outside, so if
something can be 'set off' inside it....
Thanks in advance.
Fred
Don - 10 Dec 2006 19:42 GMT
>Is there a product, consumer or professional, to use to get the smoke
>stink out of a car?
Lost cause. Several years of use with windows open and AC set to
outside air will lessen but not eliminate it. All the products I have
known people to try produce a blend of tobacco stench and cheap
perfume stench that I consider even worse than the tobacco stench
alone.
Don
www.donsautomotive.com
> The car is sitting over winter outside, so if
>something can be 'set off' inside it....
>
>Thanks in advance.
>
>Fred
Tegger - 11 Dec 2006 00:41 GMT
> Is there a product, consumer or professional, to use to get the smoke
> stink out of a car? The car is sitting over winter outside, so if
> something can be 'set off' inside it....
I've never found a way.
My previous car had belonged to a heavy smoker. I had the seats and carpets
steam-cleaned, and scrubbed the plastic headliner and all the interior trim
with detergent and water. Made a difference, but never got rid of it
completely.

Signature
Tegger
Bob M. - 11 Dec 2006 01:17 GMT
Take it to a detail shop and let them handle it. Worked well on the last
company truck I had.
Possibly, renting an ozone generator and leaving it in the car for an hour
or so would work, but I don't know. Let it air out after that, too much
ozone isn't good for you.
> Is there a product, consumer or professional, to use to get the smoke
> stink out of a car? The car is sitting over winter outside, so if
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>
> Fred
mandtprice@gmail.com - 12 Dec 2006 19:32 GMT
> Take it to a detail shop and let them handle it. Worked well on the last
> company truck I had.
>
> Possibly, renting an ozone generator and leaving it in the car for an hour
> or so would work, but I don't know. Let it air out after that, too much
> ozone isn't good for you.
I don't know about the ozone generator, but getting a full detailing
didn't completely get rid of the stench. The cigarette small was
always leaching out of the padding in the seats, especially in the back
when the kids got in and bounced around before settling.
Matthew
Ted Mittelstaedt - 11 Dec 2006 08:16 GMT
> Is there a product, consumer or professional, to use to get the smoke
> stink out of a car? The car is sitting over winter outside, so if
> something can be 'set off' inside it....
>
> Thanks in advance.
Clean all interior surfaces of the vehicle including the headliner (that is
a
very tricky business so make sure to take it to someone who has done it
before) then drive it regularly The cleaning will cut the smoke stink by
probably
75%. The remaining smell will eventually go away by itself but it will take
at least 2 years before anyone who is sensitive to smoke smell will not
complain immediately as soon as they get into it.
Note also that cigarette smoke sensitivity is partly "in the head" as it
were,
for most people. There's few who are actually really physically allergic to
it. Most people who claim to be have convinced themselves that they are
and once they believe they are allergic, they will develop allergy symptoms
anyway. 40 years ago everyone smoked and few people complained. And
this is coming from someone who has never smoked in his life (at least, not
tobacco)
Ted
ninebal310@aol.com - 11 Dec 2006 11:28 GMT
> Is there a product, consumer or professional, to use to get the smoke
> stink out of a car? The car is sitting over winter outside, so if
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>
> Fred
It may not be what you suspect. Mold can build-up in the Heater/AC vent
system and give off a simular odor. Your local Autozone and other parts
stores sell a product that you squirt into the outside air intake that
will eliminate this odor and the mold. Since it sells for only a couple
bucks, it is worth the try.
Good Luck,
Hank
ROY BRAGG - 28 Dec 2006 23:44 GMT
This is a little after the fact of this post, but continuous cleaning and
air fresheners worked (in my house anyway) to eliminate smoke odor when I
stopped smoking several years ago. It should also work in a car.
Roy
>> Is there a product, consumer or professional, to use to get the smoke
>> stink out of a car? The car is sitting over winter outside, so if
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
>
> Hank
bm2boats - 31 Dec 2006 04:37 GMT
Fill the ash tray up with Baking soda. Or go to Home depot or Lowes and
they sell in the section of Air Filters, a bag that looks like rocks. I
will filter the air as you drive with the A/C on, heater on, or a window
open. but will take time. Clean the Car top to under the seats. Put
baking soda in the Ash Tray, and sprinkle baking soda on the seats and
on the carpets( Yes the carpet piece at the rear window) over night or
better yet over the weekend. Then Vacumn it up.

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bm2boats
http://www.automotiveforums.com
ninebal310@aol.com - 31 Dec 2006 13:20 GMT
> Fill the ash tray up with Baking soda. Or go to Home depot or Lowes and
> they sell in the section of Air Filters, a bag that looks like rocks. I
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> on the carpets( Yes the carpet piece at the rear window) over night or
> better yet over the weekend. Then Vacumn it up.
The smell the original poster complains about must be really bad.
If he works in a septic tank and complains about cigarette smell, I
think there is other issues. :-)
Hank
HLS@nospam.nix - 31 Dec 2006 19:04 GMT
> The smell the original poster complains about must be really bad.
> If he works in a septic tank and complains about cigarette smell, I
> think there is other issues. :-)
>
> Hank
Are you saying that he is smelling butt odor in any case;>)