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Filthy carpet trim - how to clean?
Following up from my flood the other day I started looking at the state of the footwells and carpets, it's sandy beige (papyrus?) trim. The drivers side is really bad apart from the overmat which I bought new a while back.
The main foam-backed carpet is badly stained, highlighted by the recent soaking. As are the fixed carpet sections around the pedal area. The transmission tunnel side panel I cleaned once before (last time I did the drains!) as that was stained, I thought it looked like brown shoe polish from the location and colour. The main carpet I've now washed in the shower using a scrubbing brush and washing machine liquid detergent. I did it 3 times as a seemingly endless amount of dark brown muck came out. It did seem to be water-soluble (especially with detergent) with only a small amount of gritty residue. It could ideally be done few more times, but I haven't the willpower and it's looking so much better now, draining out hanging vertically before I put it somewhere to dry. But I am mystified what could have stained it, the amount seemed ridiculous for just shoe polish. The dark brown colouring was in the carpet side fibres and backing material, relatively little came out of the foam padding on the other side. Though I do wonder if it came out of the heavy black soundproofing material permanently fixed on the transmission tunnel as that was soaked too. That leaves the transmission tunnel trim panel to do again (a bit of black shoe polish from me) and the footrest (both come out when I attack the drivers side drain the drain) plus the fuse panel cover and the carpet under the pedals. The last one, which also goes round the kickdown switch, looks tricky to remove. Does anyone know how? |
I was looking for the same info. On detailingworld.co.uk someone recommended using a power washer jet lance like you would on the car, apparently it gets most of the dirt out.
Have a search on there to see what they recommend as the detergent. Although probably care is needed in case the power wash can damage the carpet? |
I'd probably give the jet washer a go if it was summer. ;) As it's the base carpet and covered by mats it's worth taking a risk.
But does anyone know if/how the carpet under the pedals comes out? |
Hi guys
I've used Persil and small carpet brush like this one below First I damped it with water and persil and left it for 10minutes. Then brushed in properly taking my time and jet washed it. For interior same stuff but no jet wash of course, just kept applying more and hot water by brush from the bowl and then sucked all in with one of them http://www.averncleaningsupplies.com...HbcaAgVP8P8HAQ For heavy stain I used a commercial stain remover spray, but I can't tell you which one coz it was given to me in a clear spray bottle It was this brand, but it wasn't coffee one if I remember well, but I found all Prochem stuff to be fairly powerful http://www.clean4less.co.uk/coffee-s...CygaAv9C8P8HAQ https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/i..._6IWV7iLJbvQjr |
The drivers carpet pretty much dried out by this morning and still has some staining and marks.
The difference is that it's much more like shoe marks from the location, and a damp cloth doesn't touch it so I'm guessing shoe polish, which the other stuff was not. On the other hand solvents - I tried methanol, ethanol and white spirit - did get some of it up, so with a clean cloth it's looking a lot better, though still a bit darker than it should. But it sits under a mat most of the time so there are limits! Given the car didn't have a drivers mat when I bought it I wonder if something was spilt on it and it was thrown away, but that it also soaked through into the carpet below. Coffee maybe, but rather a lot of it...... |
Quote:
With the main carpet, footrest and fuse cover out the only thing holding it is the trim round the kickdown switch (D2 facelift). That trim is held by three Torx T25 bolts beneath little covers that are easily lever out with the tip of a small screwdriver and the carpet section can then be wiggled out beneath the accelerator pedal. The kickdown switch stays in place so the car is perfectly driveable, though I'd probably put the fuse cover back first. |
I have to say, I've used this stuff for years on various different coloured carpets, and it's always got everything out. Cheap and extremely effective.
http://www.halfords.com/motoring/cle...ner-400ml#tab3 Zip |
thanks, I will probably try the washing powder & brush first. If that fails I could try the Halfords stuff. Although mine is covered by a rubber mat so it doesn't really matter too much.
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Out of interest the carpet around the kickdown switch has a thick matted backing that seems quite absorbent, but it's not the squishy foam used on other sections.
It will take a while to dry out but came out last and and needs to go back first so a bit of speed is called for! In order to dry it I eventually put it in a very low temperature oven, and that has worked well. Hot enough to dry, but I could still handle it so maybe 85C give or take a bit. |
I've never had to remove very heavy carpet staining, but a good wet and dry vac, with the right carpet shampoo, usually does a great job of cleaning and reviving carpets. I have this model: http://i.imgur.com/fsERP0d.jpg
If you haven't already got one, just convince the other half that it's a good investment for cleaning household carpets and flooring :) A Vax continuously pumps clean, warm water through the fibres, while lifting and brushing them. And the best bit is, when you've done you can turn the water off and use it to suck them dry (or, at worst, slightly damp). |
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