removing grease spots from carpets?

I'm hoping someone here will have knowledge to help me.

I was cleaning up a bought-at-auction Record #82 quick release vice (10 quid!).

I'm sure people are familiar with the sort of stuff that was crudded on to the main screw; a pleasing decades old mix of grease, oil and black stuff.

Having rendered the vice wonderfully functional, I left the workshop.

Later, I want back in to check on something.

AND MUST HAVE PICKED UP A PIECE OF GREASE OF MY SLIPPER.

Subsequently, my lounge carpet (quite light in colour) has little dark spots, around a stride apart.

I cannot believe I'm the first and only person to have done this, especially in present company...

So:

Does anyone have a favourite trick to remove the grease and dirt without spreading it further (the obvious problem if I try a solvent) and without wrecking the carpet?

BugBear

Reply to
bugbear
Loading thread data ...

Swarfega and a toothbrush to dissolve the grease followed by a good scrub with carpet cleaner or rent one of those carpet machines.

Reply to
Dave Baker

Get a spray can of engine degreaser. Spray liberally untill the grease is dosolved. The degreaser is then water soluble, and can be washed out with soap and water, or carpet shampoo. This works with shirts and suchlike too. I have had white shirts covered in oil and grease, and they come up spotless as long as the treatment is the first thing tried.

Alan

Reply to
Algernon

My wife has a little can of 'de-solveit' (i think thats the correct spelling) spray for just such occasions ;) I think it came from sainsburys, or similar supermarket. seems to remove almost anything. the only problem is then you are left with little clean spots about a stride apart... a dead givaway!

Dave

Reply to
david.sanderson

I've used Easy Start for dealing with errant grease spots and found it to be very effective......possibly not a good idea if you're a smoker though........

Regards

Philip T-E

Reply to
philipte

i don't have an answer, but i did laugh as i have done that same thing at a friend's home. the carpet was a light tan or ivory color.... to this day, i won't even walk on that carpet. she still speaks to me. sammm

Reply to
SAMMM

Swarfega used like this will do the job. We have a VAX that is wonderfull for cleaning carpets. I once managed to drop a full tin of coloured wood varnish on a light tan carpet. This may not be in the Vax manual, but I loaded it with Turps and shampoo'd the carpet. All the varnish came out. A conventional clean removed the turps from the carpet and Vax together. All is now perfect again.

John

Reply to
John

bugbear wrote: > Does anyone have a favourite trick to remove > the grease and dirt without spreading it further > (the obvious problem if I try a solvent) and without > wrecking the carpet?

Many thanks for all the replies; one thing I need to emphasize; this is not nice new clean grease; this is decades old, loaded with black grime grease. (*)

Think old engine oil in grease form.

BugBear

(*) and not M&S grease ;-)

Reply to
bugbear

The engine degreaser shoudl do it.

Eucalyptus oil works for beach tar, so that might do as well...and leave a nice smell.

Alan

Reply to
Algernon

I don't know if it is still available but 'Thawpit' used to work well on woollen carpets. Don't forget to try it on a part that is unseen first.

Reply to
Neil Ellwood

I don't think it's available any more. (Althugh i may be thinking of 'DabItOff'. As far as I recall it contained CTC, which my Dad said they used to clean all sorts of things in the Royal Navy. Maybe they still do. Maybe a can full could still 'walk out' of one of HM dockyards in return for a few pints?

But the ultimate safeguard against repeating the problem is to buy grease coloured carpets ;-)

Gyppo

Reply to
J D Craggs

If you've dabbed the worst out then you can try Wurth saBesto Brake Cleaner to carry the stain through, I've used it successfully when the grease from a bike chain got onto my fabric seats. Test it on a hidden area of the carpet first. The grease is clean, it's the bits of crud that contaminate it that makes the stain worse.

AJH

Reply to
AJH

I remember 40 years ago driving a PO Telephones van that we used the Carbon Tetra Chloride (CTC) from the fire extinguisher to clean stains from our clothes. This lasted for years until someone needed the extinguisher real good. It was empty! After that they put a stain into the CTC.

Reply to
Dave Croft

I have had success with label remover. It comes in a spay tin and is meant to disolve glues. Test on a hidden area for colur hold first.

Cheers

Adrian

Reply to
Adrian Hodgson

Try ice - I have found that freezing the grease spot allow the use of a blunt knife to scrape off the worst of the stain - then use one of the solvents suggested above. This has saved my bacon a few times, when coming in in a hurry to answer the phone while in the middle of dismantling some ancient machinery - Since changed to wooden floors and a cordless phone!

Dave I

Reply to
Dave I.

So many marriages saved - what good souls we are!

I don't think the black carbon matters, the engine degreaser will move it into solution & a decent vacuum cleaner should remove the dissolved gunge. Repeat until satisfied THEN wash the whole carpet with a hired cleaning machine.

Readers of this thread who have a few minutes will enjoy the text below the sig line .......... ;o))

Regards,

Kim Siddorn

Read the Instructions .

A friend of mine once built a canoe. He spent a long time on it and it was a work of art. Almost the final phase was to fill both ends with polyurethane expanding foam. He duly ordered the bits from Mr Glasplies (an excellent purveyor of all things fibreglass) and it arrived in two packs covered with appropriately dire warnings about expansion ratios and some very good notes on how to use it.

Unfortunately he had a degree, worse still two of them. One was in Chemistry, so the instructions got thrown away and the other in something mathematical because in a few minutes he was merrily calculating the volume of his craft to many decimal places and the guidelines got binned as well. He propped the canoe up on one end, got a huge tin, carefully measured the calculated amounts of glop, mixed them and quickly poured the mixture in the end of the canoe (The twin pack expands very rapidly).

I arrived as he was completing this and I looked in to see the end chamber over half full of something Cawdors Witches would have been proud of. Two thing occurred to me, one was the label which said in big letters: "Caution - expansion ration 50:1" (or something similar) and the other that the now empty tins said "approximately enough for 20 small craft". Any comment was drowned out by a sea of yellow brown foam suddenly pouring out of the middle of the canoe and the end of the canoe bursting open. My friend screamed and leapt at his pride and joy that was knocked to the ground as he started trying to bale handfuls of this stuff out with his hands. Knocking the craft over allowed the still liquid and not yet fully expanded foam to flow to the other end of the canoe where it expanded and shattered that end as well. A few seconds later and we had a canoe with two exploded ends, a mountain of solid foam about 4ft high growing out of the middle, and a chemist firmly embedded up to his armpits in it.

Round about this time he discovered the reaction was exothermic and his hands and arms were getting very hot indeed. Running about in small circles in a confined space while glued to the remains of a fairly large canoe proved ineffective so he resorted to screaming a bit instead. Fortunately a Kukri was to hand so I attacked the foam around his hands with some enthusiasm. The process was hindered by the noise he was making and the fact he was trying to escape while still attached to the canoe.

Eventually I managed to hack out a lump of foam still including most of his arms and hands. Unfortunately my tears of laughter were not helping as they accelerated the foam setting. Seeking medical help was obviously out of the embarrassment of having to explain his occupation (Chief Research Chemist at a major petrochemical organisation) would simply never have been lived down. Several hours and much acrimony later we had removed sufficient foam (and much hair) to allow him to move again. However he still looked something like a failed audition for Quasimodo with red burns on his arms and expanded blobs of foam sticking everywhere. My comment that the scalding simply made the hairs the foam was sticking to come out easier was not met with the enthusiasm I felt it deserved.

I forgot to add that in retrospect rather unwisely he had set out to do this deed in the hallway of his house, it being the only place with sufficient headroom for the canoe, achieved by poking it up the stairwell.

Having extricated him we now were faced with the problem of a canoe construction kit embedded in a still gurgling block of foam which was now irrevocably bonded to the hall and stairs carpet as well as several banister rails and quite a lot of wallpaper. At this point his wife and her mother came back from shopping......Oh yes - and he had been wearing the pullover Mum in law had knitted him for his birthday the week before.

Reply to
Kim Siddorn

Kim,

Only you could write such truths, half way through I had difficulty reading it because of the tears. Lets have some more of the same.

Martin P

Reply to
campingstoveman

Hear hear.....best story I've heard in years....worthy of Hofnung :) Perhaps you shoud work on the accent though :)

Alan

Reply to
Algernon

"Kim Siddorn" wrote (snip):-

Now that definitely made I larf, which is quite an achievement at the moment - we are reckoned to be about a fortnight away from recievership if no white knight comes forward :-(

Reply to
Nick H

Tetra Chloride

There's always some official who spolis a good thing ;-)

Gyppo

Reply to
J D Craggs

PolyTech Forum website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.