omnitonic
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Michael
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2021
- Threads
- 37
- Messages
- 992
- Reaction score
- 1,734
- Location
- Southwest Virginia
- Vehicle(s)
- 2021 JLU Willys in Sarge Green
- Occupation
- truck driver
- Thread starter
- #1
I've had my Jeep a few days, and I have an absurd amount of dog hair stuck to the back seat. I'm not remotely a neat freak, and I basically bought the 4-door just for the dog, but this amount of dog hair is ridiculous, even for me. I got a seat cover to address this problem in the future, but I want to restore the seat to new condition before I install it.
I tried a vaccuum cleaner, an anti-shedding brush, anti-shedding gloves, a rubber brush, a horse hair brush, duct tape, masking tape, a California dash duster, and lint rollers. Nothing will touch the dog hair. I've never seen anything like the way it has bonded thoroughly with the upholstery in this thing.
Short of collecting the dog hairs one by one with tweezers, I'm out of ideas. Maybe a small thermonuclear device, or at least a flame thrower. Seriously, I do have a powerful air compressor, and I might try blasting the seats with a blow gun. I've been avoiding that approach, because it seems I'm more likely to just transfer dog hair to the front seats too.
I tried a vaccuum cleaner, an anti-shedding brush, anti-shedding gloves, a rubber brush, a horse hair brush, duct tape, masking tape, a California dash duster, and lint rollers. Nothing will touch the dog hair. I've never seen anything like the way it has bonded thoroughly with the upholstery in this thing.
Short of collecting the dog hairs one by one with tweezers, I'm out of ideas. Maybe a small thermonuclear device, or at least a flame thrower. Seriously, I do have a powerful air compressor, and I might try blasting the seats with a blow gun. I've been avoiding that approach, because it seems I'm more likely to just transfer dog hair to the front seats too.
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