Dude!
You have my sympathy. That is the cats way of telling you it is his car.
It is possible it is entrenched in your sound dampening material.
There are so many products on the market for it; hopefully somone with a cat
will tell which actually works the best.
I had to pull the wooden floor up in a room and replace it along with the
carpeting early on. That experience has kept me from having a pet,
especially a cat.
I saw a show once where they let a dead animal jelly in a car to show what
professionals do to clean a vehicle that has had a dead body in it. Car
looked great when they were done but the smell was still in the ventilation
system.
----- Original Message -----
From: "steb" <stebharvey@ameritech.net>
To: <datsun-roadsters@autox.team.net>
Sent: Monday, July 17, 2006 3:44 PM
Subject: I love cats, NOT!
> Advice needed on removing the unbelievable smell that I was greeted with
> when I went out to my sister's farm barn to retrieve a 68. It sat for 3
> years in the barn but was covered completely with two tarps, bungee
> cords and plastic. After shoveling the 100 lbs of cat crap off the top
> and rolling it outside, I removed the covers to discover the interior
> was completely ruined by the little kitties peepee. On Sunday I stripped
> the interior out (it's in the burn barrel including the seats) and
> washed the inside body 5 times with pine cleaner. It still smells to
> high heaven. I just picked up a gallon of pet stain/smell remover from
> the pet store and am currently spraying the inside. Has anyone even had
> this kind of fun?
>
> If I can't get the smell out I guess I could donate the car to the zoo
> so the big cats have a nice litter box.
>
> Steve Harvey
> Milwaukee
> P.S. For the cat lovers out there let it be known that I don't hate
> cats, just their pee.
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