Left raw beef in the trunk

jostan

New member
I went grocery shopping Sunday night, I didn't see this one item in the trunk and left it there. It started to smell in the car around Monday, nothing too strong though. Didn't think anything of it.



After work today (tuesday) the smell got very strong. When I got home I checked the trunk and there it was, an unopened package of meat.



I sprayed the trunk with APC and used a shop vac. The smell has gotten a little bit better but it's still there. I can also smell it in the car also.



Is there any products that I could buy OTC for this? I want to try to knock it out tonight. Thanks in advance.
 
Someone elsewhere said they used coffee grounds to get the smell of meat out of their trunk.



Other suggestions. Baking Soda, Wadded up sheets of newspapers along with Charcoal briquettes.



If all this fails try an ozone generator.
 
nosbusa1700 said:
Someone elsewhere said they used coffee grounds to get the smell of meat out of their trunk.



Other suggestions. Baking Soda, Wadded up sheets of newspapers along with Charcoal briquettes.



If all this fails try an ozone generator.





are the above methods of covering the smell with different smell? Was wondering if there were any special cleaner for the carpet for this type of stain. Want to get rid of it completely.
 
The baking soda and charcoal briquettes will help to absorb the odor, not mask it. Also, whenever possible, leave the trunk open so that it can air out a bit.
 
Depending on the car, the trunk material can be removed quite easily. Take it out, spray and scrub stain with APC and rinse out with garden hose a few times and let dry in the sun. Clean the metal under the stain. Spray with a deodorizer, as stated Odorcide works well.
 
My wife spilled a fair amount of milk in the back of her 4runner. Smell got pretty bad. I cleaned the area with Tuff Stuff and Febreezed the whole car. Never had any more problems.
 
First you need to remove as much of the residue as pissible. If you can remove the carpet and clean underneith to do ASAP. If Not Flood rinse and extract with clear water until the rxtracted water is clear. Then spray the area witH ANY ENZYME soloution you can find. I guess the easiest place to look is a pet store. Mix the enzyme with warm (not hot) water and spray liberally on hte area. leave car in a cool place and allow enzymes to "digest" the microscopic debris. When ther is no more "food' the enzymes starve to death and die. Rinse with water (via extractor) and air dry.
 
Oddly enough vinegar is a great deodorizer, kills 98% of bacteria as well. I use it for most of my household cleaning in a 50/50 mix. I'm readying my older truck to resell and sent it out for detailing, but the smoke scent was still really strong. I sprayed with febreeze and left a tupperware with straight vinegar in it for a day and the smell is gone.
 
My dog pee'd on the rear bench seat of my truck a few months ago. I thought that I had gotten it out, but no such luck. I even applied enzymes to the area but I guess that it may have penetrated the foam. I wonder if the vinegar trick will work if I soak the cloth and foam with vinegar? Does anyone know if the smell of vinegar lingers after it has touched cloth or foam?
 
RustyBumper said:
My dog pee'd on the rear bench seat of my truck a few months ago. I thought that I had gotten it out, but no such luck. I even applied enzymes to the area but I guess that it may have penetrated the foam. I wonder if the vinegar trick will work if I soak the cloth and foam with vinegar? Does anyone know if the smell of vinegar lingers after it has touched cloth or foam?



All I did was fill a tupper ware container about half full of vinegar and leave it sit in the car for a couple of days. I didn't apply vinegar at all. This was in my wife's 06 CRV that we left the sunroof open during a down poor. We sucked as much water out as possible but still got that mildew smell.
 
I've done both the Tupperware and the pre soaking before steaming, both are pretty effective and the vinegar smell goes away quickly. The Tupperware is more effective on a soaked in smell but it does require a bit of time. I just popped the container open at night when the last drive of the day was finished. Works in the fridge and around the house too.
 
I've got some smoke smell in a car as well. I'll try the vinegar method. I've found Febreeze works pretty well, but only for a few weeks and the smell comes back.
 
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