I know that in Utah as long as you can't see through the walls and it doesn't leak (badly) when it rains, then the house is considered in good condition, but in the rest of the country a house's worth is the sum of its parts, and an oil-stained driveway is worth less than a clean one.Originally posted by: Electric Amish
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Looks ugly & lowers property value.Originally posted by: Electric Amish
Why do you care?
Driveways were meant to have oil on them....
Thanks for the ideas, folks![]()
Bullshit!![]()
Yeah, I can see it now....
BUYER: I LOVE this house. It's the house of my dreams. I'd buy it if it weren't for the oil stain on the driveway...
jesus christ....
I'd be more worried about removing the stench of back-bacon and Labatt's from the carpet and drapes...![]()
Originally posted by: stev0
Originally posted by: Skoorb
I will add that we do have a lawn somewhat close to the oil, so we don't want to have a large patch of death, should some of this stuff happen to land on the grass![]()
never had a problem with the acid killing grass. you don't put it on in full strength, a 50:1 water:acid mix would be plenty. pour some on the stain, brush with a old broom, let sit, get the power washer and spray away![]()
Originally posted by: MrsSkoorb
Originally posted by: Hoober
Cat litter.
Really? On OLD oil stains? I heard that on fresh ones it works well....that's safe to use too!
Next question:
Who wants to come over and actually clean it?
Originally posted by: MrsSkoorb
Next question:
Who wants to come over and actually clean it?
![]()
Originally posted by: stev0
muriatic acid and a power washer
Originally posted by: Ly2n
Originally posted by: stev0
muriatic acid and a power washer
Be careful with the muriatic acid. It actually eats away the concrete. We used it to remove the unwanted cement from bricks and roofs. It desolved the cement and then we could wash it away. Cleaning an oil stain this way is actually removing the stained concrete, the acid doesn't interact with the oil at all. And a power washer isn't really needed. We just used a hose. As for your grass, the acid should be so diluted by the time it gets there, that it shouldn't be any problem.
I would suggest that you use the suggestions that actually removes the oil, rather than removing the concrete. Detergents, paint thinner and the like seems to be the better choices.
Originally posted by: MrsSkoorb
Next question:
Who wants to come over and actually clean it?
![]()
Originally posted by: Mill
I'd come over and do it, but isn't Skoorb about to get off work now?
