Wood soaked up diesel

DangerousPirate

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I got a piece of wood here that soaked uo a lot of diesel and consequently reeks. Not to mention being a fire hazard.

Anythung I can treat the wood with to get the diesel out? Acetone? Or air it out for a few weeks? Fairy liquid?
 
What is the wood attached too? I imagine there’s little you could do other than speed up the drying process. Leave a small computer fan blowing air over the wood for a few weeks if you have suitable PV to charge your batteries…?

That or a beach bonfire if it’s easily replaced with a fresh bit of wood.

I kinda like the will. Never rot persective tho. You can just satisfy yourself that you’ve just used a super effective preservative!
 
A gentle flame held under it will get rid of the diesel...
If you are able to take the timber out you can heat it with a gas torch until the diesel starts to burn off. It's a slow process as when the diesel burns it eventually starts to burn the timber. Put it out, allow to cool and then go again. It does work but takes a time. I did this on some mahogany 3/4 ply which was too good to replace. I then used CPES pentrating epoxy to seal, primed and repainted or you could varnish depending on the finish.
 
If you are able to take the timber out you can heat it with a gas torch until the diesel starts to burn off. It's a slow process as when the diesel burns it eventually starts to burn the timber. Put it out, allow to cool and then go again. It does work but takes a time. I did this on some mahogany 3/4 ply which was too good to replace. I then used CPES pentrating epoxy to seal, primed and repainted or you could varnish depending on the finish.
It was a joke, but that's quite interesting.

Oil soaked gun stocks are cleaned by soaking in acetone and /or gently heating (very low oven) with whiting (or cat litter). With diesel being lighter you could probably get away without the heat
 
It was a joke, but that's quite interesting.

Oil soaked gun stocks are cleaned by soaking in acetone and /or gently heating (very low oven) with whiting (or cat litter). With diesel being lighter you could probably get away without the heat
I for one thought you were joking, too. I don't really want to do anything with fire on a diesel soaked piece of wood.
 
Fullers Earth ... Kitty Litter ....

But you will never get it all out ...

Bury the wood in the Kitty Litter ... leave it for days !!!

Don't heat it over just warming - as that will drive it deeper into the wood.

Once you get to point of no more coming out - then a conventional old style oil based paint could be used to paint the wood ...
 
Well, it's worth a shot and easy to get. If it doesn't work, I'll just buy a piece of wood and redo it. I am just worried that a new piece will look off and I end up redoing all seat fiddlings.
 
It was a joke, but that's quite interesting.

Oil soaked gun stocks are cleaned by soaking in acetone and /or gently heating (very low oven) with whiting (or cat litter). With diesel being lighter you could probably get away without the heat

I strongly advise against heat applied to any article soaked in acetone !!

Just for the curious - when I was in Chemistry Lab at school - I played with Acetone and a lit Bunsen Burner .... I was banned from Chemistry and my Mother had to meet School Headmaster to agree my being let back in as I needed the number of Subjects for my GCE subjects.
What swayed in my favour (?) was that the Lab was relatively new and certified Fire Proof ... but my 'game' showed that the wall and paint covering was highly flammable.
Anyway - the matter was that Acetone with heat produces serious 'unhealthy' vapours ........
 
What piece of wood is it as in does it have to look good ? Give it time and the smell will go. I waterproofed my sprayhood with white diesel. Very cheap and very water repellent once you get past nearly 3 weeks of smell.
 
I strongly advise against heat applied to any article soaked in acetone !!

Just for the curious - when I was in Chemistry Lab at school - I played with Acetone and a lit Bunsen Burner .... I was banned from Chemistry and my Mother had to meet School Headmaster to agree my being let back in as I needed the number of Subjects for my GCE subjects.
What swayed in my favour (?) was that the Lab was relatively new and certified Fire Proof ... but my 'game' showed that the wall and paint covering was highly flammable.
Anyway - the matter was that Acetone with heat produces serious 'unhealthy' vapours ........
From experience in a laboratory in about 1970, I can say that if you have a severe cold, washing hankies in acetone revives them very rapidly! But that laboratory would have driven any H&S person to drink. I hate to think what I was exposed to there.

If diesel has soaked into wood, nothing but time will remove it effectively; perhaps GENTLE heat. My experience of getting the cuff of a Musto Snug wet with diesel was that a) Musto couldn't recommend anything that would remove it and b) it slowly evaporated over many months.
 
I strongly advise against heat applied to any article soaked in acetone !!

Just for the curious - when I was in Chemistry Lab at school - I played with Acetone and a lit Bunsen Burner .... I was banned from Chemistry and my Mother had to meet School Headmaster to agree my being let back in as I needed the number of Subjects for my GCE subjects.
What swayed in my favour (?) was that the Lab was relatively new and certified Fire Proof ... but my 'game' showed that the wall and paint covering was highly flammable.
Anyway - the matter was that Acetone with heat produces serious 'unhealthy' vapours ........
Apologies for my disclarity - oven/kitty litter first! 👍 😱
 
........My experience of getting the cuff of a Musto Snug wet with diesel was that a) Musto couldn't recommend anything that would remove it and b) it slowly evaporated over many months.

Why is it ALWAYS collars and cuffs that get the oil/grease/diesel? It's never an out of the way place where it doesn't matter, or wipes off easily.
 
From experience in a laboratory in about 1970, I can say that if you have a severe cold, washing hankies in acetone revives them very rapidly! But that laboratory would have driven any H&S person to drink. I hate to think what I was exposed to there.

If diesel has soaked into wood, nothing but time will remove it effectively; perhaps GENTLE heat. My experience of getting the cuff of a Musto Snug wet with diesel was that a) Musto couldn't recommend anything that would remove it and b) it slowly evaporated over many months.
Similar experience. I once managed to stain a customer's marble garden table top with linseed oil and nothing I tried could make it better, I gave them a hefty reduction on the bill. A couple of years later I was back there again, time and sun had made it disappear. Nothing was said :(
 
What piece of wood is it as in does it have to look good ? Give it time and the smell will go. I waterproofed my sprayhood with white diesel. Very cheap and very water repellent once you get past nearly 3 weeks of smell.
Well, when I first posted here it was just the seat fiddling (one of them). But turns out the back of the bulkhead behind the cushion might be affected, too. What a nightmare. Stupid diesel heater. First it burns my cushion when I tried it out, then it ruined my clothes that were under the v berth bunk, then the fiddling, and now it's seemingly the wood of the bulkhead, too.

How long do you think the diesel smell will stay? I think such things take years to fully go away.
 
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