[DIY] Cleaning Concrete Garage Floor

Trinity is right about this stuff. You can get it in concetrate and dilute it. I have used it on concrete and it works great. I had cats with the cat box in the garage (a small cat door next to the door to the garage allowed the cats access). No need for details, but the cats didn't alway use the box. I used the enzyme stuff. Cats have passed on. I did one last treatment with the enzyme stuff----no more ordor, even in the humid times when the concrete is damp. Be gentle with YourSelf Sue

Comments

1 Responses to [DIY] Cleaning Concrete Garage Floor

  1. leonor_1500 on 2007-12-21 12:47:26.055303

    pour on the area of contamination, let them sit, and they literally demolish all the little particles that smell... bleach is good, but not an absolute... the enzymes end the source of smell, so even during damp seasons, the smell doesn't return... I'm going to have to differ a little bit here ... as someone with 7 cats, I've dealt with "smell issues" a lot! What I've found is that the enzyme products work pretty well, but really, they are made for surfaces that should not have bleach on them (such as carpet). What I have found is that if you have a surface that will not be damaged by bleach, then a dilute solution of bleach and water (about 1/5), left on for maybe 20 minutes, will do an excellent job of deodorizing. On surfaces that can take full-strength bleach, like porcelain, I use full-strength. (You should wash the surface with soap & water, since that gets a lot of the pee residue off so that the bleach can kill the smelly little organisms.) Ann

Leave a Reply