Let’s say I hypothetically had some mice pee in some plastic components that cannot be properly cleaned in any realistic way. Is it possible to heat it up to “cook off” the mouse pee nastiness without actually melting the plastic?

  • @zeppo@lemmy.world
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    458 months ago

    perhaps I’m committing some well known Internet discussion faux pas, but whatever you’re trying to do is probably not going to work.

          • @JusticeForPorygon@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            I’m afraid I don’t, but it’s easily one of the most famous reddit posts ever, you’ll find it if you look it up.

            It was in a thread on a post about someone who seemingly found a homemade electric chair in an abandoned house iirc. The chair was connected to a car battery, and Electro-Balls wanted to show everyone that a car battery didn’t generate enough current to cause pain, let along hurt/kill someone.

            Edit: Decided to find it because I wanted to see if I got the story right. I got the story right

            “The most painful thing was attaching the alligator clips from the power supply, but aside from that, I’d like to report a mild, and almost pleasant tingling sensation.”

            • @John_McMurray@lemmy.world
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              38 months ago

              Well, he’s right, 12v can’t break the resistance of the skin. It’s why cars are mostly 12v, it’s a safety thing. Every now and then you hear about some guy managed to kill himself working on a 24 volt vehicle without taking proper precautions. Anyways the way to torture with a car battery is using it to heat metal up.

  • @henfredemars@infosec.pub
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    8 months ago

    It depends what you mean by nastiness. Doesn’t urine contain salts that you’re never going to realistically boil?

    While urine doesn’t typically contain large amounts of protein, it may be present along with other metabolites that I don’t expect can be boiled.

    Uric acid and urea can be boiled off over about 200 Celsius, but you are going to have residue remaining.

  • @fulcrummed@lemmy.world
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    358 months ago

    Get some enzyme spray specifically for addressing pet urine. There are lots of varieties online from pet warehouse places. Nature’s Miracle is a popular one. Get the urine destroyer, the stain and odour eliminator isn’t as good.

    It actually breaks down the urine residue as opposed to the other suggestions here which mask or encapsulate the smell without addressing the source.

    I have used enzyme on quite a few things I thought would never be usable again - def worth their weight in gold in my experience.

      • ɔiƚoxɘup
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        8 months ago

        Came here to say this. Also, if bleach won’t damage it, bleach is good.

        Edit. A .

        • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksOP
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          8 months ago

          It’s more about It’s ability to move fluidly (gasously I guess…) and interact with anything else that got itself caught up in the plastic ductwork of the vehicle, other things in the barn I have more time. But spring is upon me, and it won’t be worth fighting over this if I can’t get it to not smell so ridiculous.

  • @TheAlbatross@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    278 months ago

    I think it depends on what you’re going to use the plastic component that were sullied for.

    Food Tupperware? You’re SOL. It’s porous and now contaminated. A plastic computer component? Disinfect it with diluted bleach.

    I’m not sure heating mouse urine is a good idea, it certainly won’t smell pleasant, I can tell you that.

  • gregorum
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    8 months ago

    Use white wine vinegar to clean it. Vinegar denatures urine. Then wash again with soap and water to get rid of the vinegar smell (if necessary).

    Edit: also good for getting out the cat pee smell from when your cat decides to get back at you for whatever you did to piss it off.

    Source: 45 years of owning cats and things I don’t want to throw away.

  • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    Since you mention this is a vehicle, I think the ozone generator approach is probably easiest.

    I’ve had vehicles with similar issues, and open windows + time really did it. An ozone generator is the faster version of what I’ve done.

    Just don’t let it go crazy, as ozone attacks pretty much most materials in a car. So maybe throw a generator in it, let it run for a couple hours (put a small fan in the car to really circulate it up under the dash), then air out the car well.

    The idea is the urine is probably more reactive to the ozone than anything else, so get it reacting. Then stop and clear the air before it has too much time/concentration to start on the plastics.

    If urine is in the carpet, use the enzyme with an upholstery cleaner (similar to a carpet cleaner) - then you’ll be pulling the nasty out with vacuum.

    Enzymatic cleaner is amazingly effective. Used it in a camper that had mouse nests everywhere.

    • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      38 months ago

      So I had a similar issue in the past that I used an ozone generator for… all of my upholstery just unglued itself. So this is one of the solutions that has been suggested among “just torch the thing and collect the hefty insurance on” that I am trying not to do lol… but enzymatics have been suggested elsewhere and apparently have come a long way. That’s definitely my next try.

      • FuglyDuck
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        48 months ago

        ozone is an oxidizing agent. it destroys smells by oxidizing the proteins and such that create the smell.

        Unfortunately, this also means that any plastics or adhesives used will generally be broken down too. (the degradation in plastic is similar in effect to UV exposure, where the adhesives just… as you mentioned… becomes ‘unglued’)

        Enzymatic cleansers will likely be a better solution. Though, I’ve used ozone generators to remove some truly… unique… smells; when I was working for a college cleaning dormitories. but it really is a nuclear option.

          • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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            18 months ago

            Go to a pet store, get the stuff for pet urine. I used one on a badly mouse-pee impregnated camper. (I mean BAD, had to rip out some of the interior). The cleaner worked on everything else, including wood that had absorbed years of mouse pee.

            If you use the ozone generator, maybe do it in small doses, just under the dash. Today’s plastics don’t age from oxygen exposure like 1970s cars did, so it’ll probably hold up a lot better.

            I remember 2 year old cars in the 70s with degrading plastics (cracked, out gassing coating the interior glass, etc.). Cars since the 90s have much improved plastics.

            • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksOP
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              18 months ago

              Are all the enzymatic basically the same then?

              Anyone have an idea of how to aerosolize the enzyme into the ventilation? I have a small air compressor, can I make a contraption with that?

    • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      58 months ago

      It’s two separate questions I guess, where the answer, would answer both.

      As for the more pressing issue. It’s inside some automotive internal stuff, that just wouldn’t be worth the time or expense to remove it. I really want to retain the vehicle for limited use cases, mice no longer are in the vehicle, but the odor is bad.

      I don’t necessarily expect to eliminate the odor 100%, but any reduction to the point where you don’t feel like your breathing in some measuruable amount of mouse urea would be nice…

      • @jj122
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        68 months ago

        Look into ozone generators or ozium air fresheners. Ozone generators sanitize without heat and help reduce odors but might be expensive and take a long time to be effective (hours to days). Ozium air fresheners absorb the odor and they got the gasoline smell out of my car, no idea how they work but you just leave them in your car.

      • volvoxvsmarla
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        8 months ago

        So, I have no clue what exactly it is that you want to heat and how you would do it (I somehow imagine you trying to put a microwave over the steering wheel of a car or blow drying your radio) but as for whether it would work to eliminate the odor that is bothering you… I am no expert on mouse urine smell but I did work with GC and judging from GC-O measurements you need to go up quite over 100°C to make every molecule that gives off smell volatile. So my guess would be, no, you cannot cook off the smell. My guess is even if you literally boiled a cup of mouse urine for an hour on a stove and let it cool down it would still have some odor left.

        That being said, I very much hope I am wrong and you or someone else will prove otherwise!

        The way I would go about it is probably to use something like Febreze, basically trying to put the odor molecule into a complex (is this how Febreze works?) where it either cannot bind to your receptors anymore or isn’t volatile anymore. Probably do all of it, first blow dry (?) and heat off what you can, then use some H2O2 spray if the plastic allows it first (might even get some stuff to oxidize and change its properties i.e. the smell), then blow dry (?) it again to heat off what you can, then use an odor neutralizer.

        • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksOP
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          28 months ago

          Lol, yall are really good at getting in my brain.

          So I basically have a very large tapered heat gun, with a fan… basically like a really dangerous blow dryer. I know from experience, that I can’t continuously heat in the same place (melts plastic, that I thought almost couldn’t be melted…)

          From your comment, and others, it seems like heat might not be the most ideal solution. It seems as if all this vents out to certain points that make sense, and have adequate airflow (no idea if this is actuality, taking it apart would take apart my week). So I could buy anything within reason, is febreeze the best solution if I went that route? I have heard of using “Ozium” instead or there is some kind of weird sugar type substance (can’t remember the name off my head) that was recommended that could encapsulate it?

          • volvoxvsmarla
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            58 months ago

            Lol oh Jesus please don’t use the heat gun (although I would love to use it myself), apart from the danger, I’ll also point out that while you might not melt the plastic, you might still destabilize it and/or release some actually toxic (and also smelly) compounds. I imagine a low heat blow with a normal hair dryer just to air it out would be a smart step though.

            As for what works best in terms of encapsulation - I would try to ask in a community of rodent lovers. I can imagine that those guys have their secret weapons.

            • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksOP
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              8 months ago

              Haha thanks! I am at my wits end, and want this over before it warms up in my area. I was kind of hoping some chemist might come in and give some funky way to destroy the compounds. The solution can literally be the most crazy crazily toxic compounds… as long as in the end they all cook off and get rid of the mouse nonsense.

              I have access to money, chemicals, really strong fans and other equipment, and a lot of open air. Heat just seemed easiest, my chemistry knowledge is sophomoric at best.

              • volvoxvsmarla
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                18 months ago

                Came back to read the other comments, take the enzyme spray!!! I highly vote for the enzyme spray. If there’s an enzyme for your problem then always take the enzyme.

                Ozone sounds also really cool but keep in mind that ozone itself smells weird and maybe don’t exactly breathe it in. (The smell will go away fast but I have worked with quite a few people who felt quite lightheaded after breathing in the ozone from a freshly UV-ed workbench.)

                Whatever you choose, read the label instructions first to make sure it doesn’t corrode stuff, break down plastic etc.

  • @jjagaimo@lemmy.ca
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    38 months ago

    Definitely higher than the softening point of the plastic. What kind of parts? Car, residential appliance, etc?

    • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      38 months ago

      It’s a couple different things, but one of them is automotive plastics. There is just no way to get to parts without tearing the entire thing apart, and I don’t have the time or technical skills to do it quickly. And even if I did, I am not sure if it would really be worth it because of how infrequently it’s used.

      • @jjagaimo@lemmy.ca
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        38 months ago

        You might be able to soak it in some kind of water/soap or isopropyl bath and then dry it. If it has electronics it might not be doable without taking things apart

  • @Septimaeus@infosec.pub
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    38 months ago

    Most ducting in the dash of vehicles can be accessed with just a screwdriver, and there are usually only a handful of screws and plastic fasteners/snaps you have to remove. Downloading the diagram from a shop manual will show you where they are so you don’t have to find each of them, but it’s usually apparent in situ.

    If you don’t remove the ducts to clean them, while you may be able to lessen the smell by removing vent covers and snaking cleaning materials through the ductwork, your car will still always smell. The only way to get rid of the smell entirely is to remove the affected ducts and properly wash them.

    Before any if that, however: do you know which ducts are affected? It will reduce your workload considerably, especially if the affected duct is in fact your fresh air intake, as I would expect.

    The way I would determine that is to

    1. run the fan on high with recirculate ON and all windows open for several minutes, then
    2. sit inside and close the windows. Is the smell lessened from before?
    3. If so, confirm the diagnosis by turning recirculate off. If the smell suddenly gets stronger, it’s likely the rodent never made it past the blower manifold.

    In that case you’re in luck, as you may not need to disassemble the dash much at all. (You would be working mostly in the engine compartment and passenger footwell.)

  • roguetrick
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    8 months ago

    You pretty much either put so much heat into urea that it turns to ammonia and melts your plastic while doing so or you wait for some bacteria to eat it and turn it into ammonia. It technically starts vaporizing at above 130 C.