its not the room, its you
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i love how 50% of this thread rips on freezer's personal hygiene
roflFreezer7Pro wrote:
my bedroom has that horrible "old house" smell of too many parties
febreeze though. that stuff is really good on all fabrics.
"people in ny have a general idea of how to drive. one of the pedals goes forward the other one prevents you from dying"
Yeah:haffeysucks wrote:
roflFreezer7Pro wrote:
my bedroom has that horrible "old house" smell of too many parties
febreeze though. that stuff is really good on all fabrics.

tbh what you need to do is fuck a fat girl vigorously for about 30-60 minutes while keeping the room above 75 degrees. That'll kill the "old house smell"
That is no "old house smell", that is a "student house smell". Real "old house smell" is something I would not want to get rid off, it is epic.Freezer7Pro wrote:
As some of you may know, I'm moving this summer. It's a nice bigger house and all, but my bedroom has that horrible "old house" smell of too many parties, old wallpaper and cat piss. As I won't have lots of stuff in here, I fear that my stuff will catch this smell instead of the room catching its smell.
So, what can I do to make the smell go away without tearing the place down?
To anwser your question: purge with cleansing fire! or if you have style, spray around a few bottles of Clive Christian No1
or in freezer's case fap furiously for 5 minutesSonderKommando wrote:
tbh what you need to do is fuck a fat girl vigorously for about 30-60 minutes while keeping the room above 75 degrees. That'll kill the "old house smell"
de-ionizer, borrow one from a car detailer
Rather than trying to mask the smells, use a deodorizer that removes the smell.
Neutrodol is a brand name over here, but no idea what you have over there.
Neutrodol is a brand name over here, but no idea what you have over there.
smell=damp=mould=deadly spores entering your lungs...
Scrub the walls, air it out plus all the other sensible suggestions (of which there are only a few lol).
Scrub the walls, air it out plus all the other sensible suggestions (of which there are only a few lol).
Last edited by coke (2009-06-15 17:12:36)
Mostly because of that thread where he showed pictures of his room ... after seeing that, you really wouldn't be surprised. You couldn't see the floor.Aries_37 wrote:
i love how 50% of this thread rips on freezer's personal hygiene
Step 1) Punch hole in wall.
Step 2) Shit in hole.
Step 3) Repeat.
Step 2) Shit in hole.
Step 3) Repeat.

Hehe
This coming from you is... quite ironic.
This coming from you is... quite ironic.
Oust.
If its an old house its probably got damp here and there which is main cause of smells. If the house is ventilated properly then things such as cat piss should dissipate.
Give the place a good clean then rent a dehumidifier and stick it in the house for a weeks or so. Old houses are badly ventilated that's why they stink, moisture can't get away. Check your windows and make sure they have trickle vents. If they don't and the windows are timber, drill some in the frames. They only need to be 4mm dia. Also, if the house has wooden floors on battens(not laid onto a conc floor), check the external vents which vent these floors for obstructions.
Basically, you don't want to be just covering up the smell. You need to tackle its root cause.
Check your gutters and make sure they are clear. Your roof is vented just above the gutter and if they are obstructed wind can blow water through this vent and down the inside of your wall which can then bridge across a stud/noggin on wall tie (depending on the construction methods) and give you damp.
If you need any more detailed advise. PM me.
Give the place a good clean then rent a dehumidifier and stick it in the house for a weeks or so. Old houses are badly ventilated that's why they stink, moisture can't get away. Check your windows and make sure they have trickle vents. If they don't and the windows are timber, drill some in the frames. They only need to be 4mm dia. Also, if the house has wooden floors on battens(not laid onto a conc floor), check the external vents which vent these floors for obstructions.
Basically, you don't want to be just covering up the smell. You need to tackle its root cause.
Check your gutters and make sure they are clear. Your roof is vented just above the gutter and if they are obstructed wind can blow water through this vent and down the inside of your wall which can then bridge across a stud/noggin on wall tie (depending on the construction methods) and give you damp.
If you need any more detailed advise. PM me.
Baking soda or NaHCO3 (Sodium bicarbonate) buy a few boxes/bags, it's cheap as chips, place in buckets for a few days. Smell will be all gone.
Hotbox it.
[Blinking eyes thing]
Steam: http://steamcommunity.com/id/tzyon
Steam: http://steamcommunity.com/id/tzyon
What's up with you people, no one recommended rice. Put tons of rice behind the dry wall.
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