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BMW 3-Series (E90 E92) Forum
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Send Help! Mold!
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02-01-2014, 06:50 PM | #1 |
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Send Help! Mold!
I purchased a full black Dakota interior for my E90 back in April of last year and had it stored @ my sister's place in North Carolina. When the seats were shipped to me end of December, this is what I got (cue crappy iPhone pic):
Everything I got was covered in mold-seats, door panels, steering wheel, headrests. The front seat in the picture and the rear seat bottom were the worst of it. I went to Home Depot and picked up a bottle of Concrobium Mold Cleaner which is safe for use on leather according to the label. (Seat on the left is the after) Right now everything LOOKS clean, but I'm not putting these seats in my car until I'm 100% sure they're clean and safe. My question is, how bad could it possibly be, and if possible, what else can be done to salvage them? From what I understand, the leather has a urethane(?) coating- would the mold just be on the surface coating, or is it pretty definite that it penetrated down into the leather? Is it possible that the mold has made its way into to the seat cushioning? Would steaming the seats be effective? As it is, the sport seats are non heated, so I was planning to install the seating elements so the front covers would have to come off, but I'm not going to spend hundreds more on that if I have to end up scrapping the seats... Any info would be helpful, as well as any referrals to any detailers in/around Connecticut that deals in this type of work. thanks in advance |
02-01-2014, 08:59 PM | #2 |
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You most certainly have mold spores all over the foam padding. The mold is not limited to what you see. It grows in moist, warm and dark locations. The padding was definitely as good a breeding ground.
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02-01-2014, 09:00 PM | #3 |
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Get a good leather cleaner and scrub them down with a leather brush as well. Let them sit outside during the day when your home. You don't want to mess with mold.
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02-04-2014, 09:12 AM | #4 |
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Besides what others have suggested, you might try spraying a bleach/water solution on the undersides to kill all the mold spores that have gotten into the foam. It won't help anything underneath, but will at least help kill some of the mold. Drying them out may well be the best way to go, but I would hesitate putting them in my car until they have no odor at all.
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02-17-2014, 04:17 AM | #6 |
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Get rid of the seats and forget it man... are you sure you want to risk the potential dangers of being exposed to mold long time? It's not like you're going to clean it all 100%, and the part that stays will grow... and grow... infesting your whole interior...
Forget about it man... |
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02-18-2014, 01:26 PM | #7 |
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Don't throw them away:
Do this to be sure: Either go to an upholtry shop, or do it yourself. 1. Take leather off of your seats. Clean both sides. 2. Clean all foam cushioning.... Now that the damage is visible. It's not hard..... At least on the e46 seats it was easy. When ever storing upholstery..... Cover it up. DN PS.... Could have been worse.....rats. |
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