vandezand
Well-known member
I live in an apartment with an attached garage. I've got oil stains on the floor from doing oil changes and was wondering what I could do to remove them?
Dawn dishwashing liquid in bucket of water and deck brush(so I don't have to get on my knees to brush.
kitty litter
Had an Uncle that was a chemist, water treatment and testing, I think. He had a lot of cures for different problems. He always told me that to remove oil based stains you needed to re-liquefy the oil and "lift" or absorb the molecules to the surface. I had a nice, unfinished wood floor that had oil stains all over. We followed Unc's directions, using Dawn, and scrubbed the solution into the stains, placed some heavy bath towels on the spots and weighted them down with cinder blocks until dry. BOOM! It worked! Clean as a whistle...
How did you get the oil stains out of the towels?![]()

Had an Uncle that was a chemist, water treatment and testing, I think. He had a lot of cures for different problems. He always told me that to remove oil based stains you needed to re-liquefy the oil and "lift" or absorb the molecules to the surface. I had a nice, unfinished wood floor that had oil stains all over. We followed Unc's directions, using Dawn, and scrubbed the solution into the stains, placed some heavy bath towels on the spots and weighted them down with cinder blocks until dry. BOOM! It worked! Clean as a whistle.
So, in my experience, the mechanical exercise is standardized, even the suggestions here follow the same basic method. The solvents and absorbent can vary widely depending on the stain source.
I like that Pour-n-Restore product, that looks like a genie in bottle. Wouldn't mind giving that a shot sometime.
dla
After reading this, I tried a variation of this idea on oil stained concrete. Mixed some diswashing detergent (ldawn) about 50/50 with water. poured it on the stain. put about three layers of paper towel down on top of the puddle, and poured some more water on itop of the paer towels. After a few days in the shade, it lifted quite a bit of the oil out of the concrete and deposited it in the paper towel.Had an Uncle that was a chemist, water treatment and testing, I think. He had a lot of cures for different problems. He always told me that to remove oil based stains you needed to re-liquefy the oil and "lift" or absorb the molecules to the surface. I had a nice, unfinished wood floor that had oil stains all over. We followed Unc's directions, using Dawn, and scrubbed the solution into the stains, placed some heavy bath towels on the spots and weighted them down with cinder blocks until dry. BOOM! It worked! Clean as a whistle.
So, in my experience, the mechanical exercise is standardized, even the suggestions here follow the same basic method. The solvents and absorbent can vary widely depending on the stain source.
I like that Pour-n-Restore product, that looks like a genie in bottle. Wouldn't mind giving that a shot sometime.
dla
I live in an apartment with an attached garage. I've got oil stains on the floor from doing oil changes and was wondering what I could do to remove them?
