Thanks for taking the time to video this. I had a bad stain on my driveway last year and I tried all kinds of products, none of them did a great job. I tried something that was a similar idea to this where you let it sit overnight but even that did not get it all up. Best luck I had was with something called Salty Absorb from Tractor Supply, It got it to the point the HOA won't complain about it. I have made a note to try this next time though.
Ive had pretty good luck with Shout (for laundry) on plant matter stains. It takes a couple of applications, but its always been good for the concrete walls that would get palm tree berry stains
@@bobbygfl Well, you could turn them ALL over. lol. Kidding Because pavers and bricks are kiln dried, you could try a propane "weed torch" on them. Not recommended for concrete, because it could cause spalling.
I really think it needs to have some level of thickness in order to pull the stain out. That’s how it appears to work. It absorbs the stain into the product. so the thicker layer of product the longer it will pull the stain out. I think if you smear thin layer, you just end up having to do it multiple times. Fortunately it’s only $12 a bottle and the bottle seems to go pretty far with little spots like this.
Thanks for taking the time to video this. I had a bad stain on my driveway last year and I tried all kinds of products, none of them did a great job. I tried something that was a similar idea to this where you let it sit overnight but even that did not get it all up. Best luck I had was with something called Salty Absorb from Tractor Supply, It got it to the point the HOA won't complain about it. I have made a note to try this next time though.
Glad it helped! I was amazed. Stubborn marks took a couple applications but effortless
I'll look out for that. Also ... we need a vlog on how you do your edging ... looks great!
Thank you! Lol. And thanks. Kind of a detail freak I guess.
Ive had pretty good luck with Shout (for laundry) on plant matter stains. It takes a couple of applications, but its always been good for the concrete walls that would get palm tree berry stains
Great tip! Thanks
For the stains left by the palm, you might consider turning the pavers over, then cleaning them.
The pavers are angled on the top. The bottoms are perfectly flat. You would be able to tell they were upside down. Great idea, though!
@@bobbygfl Well, you could turn them ALL over. lol. Kidding
Because pavers and bricks are kiln dried, you could try a propane "weed torch" on them. Not recommended for concrete, because it could cause spalling.
Thanks!
Does it work on asphalt?
I’d think so. As long as it’s old dried out asphalt.
wow - that's a lot of product being used. Can't you just pour and smear?
I really think it needs to have some level of thickness in order to pull the stain out. That’s how it appears to work. It absorbs the stain into the product. so the thicker layer of product the longer it will pull the stain out. I think if you smear thin layer, you just end up having to do it multiple times. Fortunately it’s only $12 a bottle and the bottle seems to go pretty far with little spots like this.
Yes easily but then this paid promotional video would not encourage as much product use would it?