![]() |
How do you get the stink out of hats?
My favorite hats are truckers caps and they smell but I don’t want to throw them away. One says Best Dad and the other is my Jeep hat. I’ve handwashed, machine washed, used Tide and even Oxy Clean - no help. Is there a secret or are they just toast?
|
Febreeze perhaps???
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk |
I’m going to try that tomorrow
|
On amazon you can buy tea tree oil. You mix a bit with water then wash the hat in it, then leave it out in the sun. It's natural so doesn't poison you but kills of any nasties. And the sun also kills off the musty and other smells. I've used this trick for shoes too.
|
I put mine in the dishwasher. Put it on the quick setting as to not harm the cardboard in the visor. If you can turn off the heat dry setting do it.
|
Quote:
|
I've tried using Febreeze a few times....I can't stand the smell of it.
|
ozonator.
|
Baking soda detergent or regular baking soda added with regular detergent. Seems too simple but makes for great results in a dressing smell as opposed to covering it up with other smells.
|
I actually bought a combo dryer/dry cleaner to use for my racing fire suit and helmet as they can get ripe as all get out after a race weekend! Using the drycleaning part made the suit or helmet smell just like new!
John |
Quote:
|
I had an odor problem with my workout clothes. They would come out of the dryer smelling nice and clean, but 10 minutes into my next workout wearing them, the odor would resurface. The issue is the oils that get trapped in the fabric. Washing masks the odor, but once they start getting agitated, the odors are released once again from the oils. They key is to get rid of the oils.
My simple solution to this is to add a cup or two of white vinegar to a 5 gallon bucket of water. (Google this, if you like). Add the aromatic clothing and fill the bucket the rest of the way with water...enough to cover the clothing, or your hats. Let it soak for an hour and then toss them back in the washer and let it do it's thing. I no longer have that issue with my clothes. Randy |
Quote:
Vinegar added to soapy water is supposed to help with body order in clothes. |
Quote:
|
Just a thought if these ideas fail to resolve the issue.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1663959790.jpg |
When I bought my motorbike jacket from an op' shop it had that "old man on a bus" smell. No very nice. The thing that mainly killed off the smell was sunshine.
♪♪ Give me sunshine ♪♪ |
I've always toased my stinky hats into the wash with my whites (hot water) and that gets the smell out, but beats the hell outta the visors eventually.
I need some new hats and I have white vinegar :).... Thanks! |
Quote:
Hydrogen Peroxide at low levels is also a debribment for teeth. Surfacants and Sterilizers are not the same thing. -Surfacants lift dirt from a surface. -Sterilizers kill bacteria and/or virii |
my bald buddy says that once a hat starts stinking there's no saving them. it seems to be a bald guy thing.
|
I like to use a concoction of Oxyfresh, baking soda, Hydrogen Peroxide, OxyClean, vinegar, bleach, Fabreeze, tea tree oil in the washing machine on hot, then leave it in the sun to dry.
Edit: if your hat survives, it has to work! |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 05:01 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website