panhead
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2016
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- Location
- NSW Central Coast
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There was a video on ammonyc YouTube channel where the car was mold and mouse pee and poo contaminated to the point it was dangerous to one’s health to even try and clean. So they used pellets dropped into some fluid and an electrical charge was applied which produced a strong ozone gas within the closed vehicle which killed the mold spores and also killed the smell from mouse pee and poo. No match and petrol required
Obviously the best approach is to avoid the problem in the first place by correctly storing and periodically checking the car
Did a quick search but didn’t find the video![]()
The rats are attracted to fertiliser stored in a shed about 50 metres away.
They chewed through a blind grommet in the firewall to gain entry.
That was about 15 years ago, the car now sits with its doors and boot open, all the seats, carpet, door cards, headlining and rear parcel shelf were removed and never refitted.
The car's metal interior was washed down with bleach, I've been told it doesn't smell anymore yet I still smell it, I've been told it's just my imagination.
My house in Sydney backs onto a golf course and the rats are attracted by all the fertiliser they store to keep the fairways and greens in top condition.
The rats are a pest to all the neighbours, I stored a dozen boxes of books in my shed only to find the rats had chewed their way inside to make nests in each box, they set up home inside the books and all had to be dumped.
Sometimes you just can't control them, and ratsak doesn't always work as they figure it out, and if not, they don't always go away to die.
I can't remember how many liquified dead rats I've had to try and remove from my shed, they can chew through the timber eaves if they need too.
Constant checking is a must do, it's a lesson I learnt long ago.
I don't have any rats that I know of where I live on the Central Coast.
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