Wife asking - best way to get fresh engine oil off my hoody?
Wife asking - best way to get fresh engine oil off my hoody?
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Discussion

TiminYorkshire

Original Poster:

624 posts

244 months

Sunday 22nd February
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So my wife is asking, "What's best way to get fresh engine oil off my hoody?"

hungry_hog

2,818 posts

213 months

Sunday 22nd February
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TiminYorkshire said:
So my wife is asking, "What's best way to get fresh engine oil off my hoody?"
Dr Beckmann stain devil (oils / sauces version), there are about 8 variants.

Managed to get red wine out of a white shirt with it!

May take two cycles to remove all

Cliftonite

8,706 posts

163 months

Sunday 22nd February
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Swarfega?

5lab

1,857 posts

221 months

Sunday 22nd February
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if you've got some degreaser that'll often get it out (if you don't have swarfega). failing that fairy liquid does a fairly good job

Blue_star

769 posts

41 months

Sunday 22nd February
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Is that more of a threat, did you book boys road trip last minute? Was she holding pickaxe when she asked you?

Robertb

3,578 posts

263 months

Sunday 22nd February
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Brake cleaner is an excellent degreaser and evaporates away. Had success using it to remove bicycle oil from my study carpet.

In this instance I’d soak the oily area on the hoodie with a neat washing up liquid for a while then shove it in the washing machine.

Mr Squarekins

1,553 posts

87 months

Sunday 22nd February
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Spray wd40 all over the spot and rub, dab with kitchen roll. I got gloss paint off a fleece with this, last weekend. Like new now.

ninepoint2

3,967 posts

185 months

Sunday 22nd February
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Cakey_

220 posts

51 months

Sunday 22nd February
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Elbow grease degrease spray, i think its yellow. Its saved me a couple of times with grease and oil marks. Somewhere like homebargains should sell it with the household cleaning sprays.

SimonTheSailor

12,932 posts

253 months

Sunday 22nd February
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Lots of saliva - suck it out.

turbomoggie

316 posts

129 months

Sunday 22nd February
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I had a 'funny' incident with a slippery oil filter. It was a cartoon moment of it slipping out of my hands just as I took it off the handy integrated peg on my oil drain tray, I attempted to catch the oil filter, it slipped again and somehow ended up by my face cheek and it rolling down the shoulder of my t shirt before landing on the floor.

So oil on my hands, face, beard, t shirt and drive way.

I thought the T shirt was a gonner and put it in to a pile of old clothes I keep for doing DIY. After several washes over a few months of wearing the T shirt for other grubby tasks, (with bio powder) the oil stain eventually disappeared.


LunarOne

7,058 posts

162 months

Sunday 22nd February
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Brake cleaner, or petrol!

TiminYorkshire

Original Poster:

624 posts

244 months

Tuesday 24th February
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A good dollop of fairy on it first and a bit of a scrub, then a wash in the machine and right as rain.

OIC

359 posts

18 months

Tuesday 24th February
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Keep the oil stained hoody for manly car mechanic stuff and get the boss to buy you a new one to wear down the boozer.

Win win.

mikey_b

2,549 posts

70 months

Tuesday 24th February
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Cliftonite said:
Swarfega?
I’ve always used this to great effect. Rub a blob of Swarfega thoroughly onto the grease stain, and then wash as normal. It simply disappears.

Unfortunately traditional green Swarfega has recently gone out of production, and I’m not sure what to replace my almost empty tub with. There’s obviously demand for remaining stock as the prices on eBay and Amazon have gone insane, by which I mean £15-20 for a tub.

Anyone know an equivalent product? I’ve always found it quite effective on my hands after working on the car, and also I specifically don’t want one with grit in it, if it’s going in the washing machine on clothes stains as well.