(08-23-2017, 08:11 AM)Cooler Wrote: I never heard of that stuff. Each 3 x 3 area requires 16 ounces of material. So each gallon will cover 72 square feet.
I think I would use both. It is doubtful that the liquid would penetrate to the rafters (and the urine could have). So I think both would be a good idea. Would you use it after sanding or before sanding for refinishing hardwood floors? If it is water based, it will require re-sanding as it will raise the grain.
Look at the company website. The stuff is an enzyme in alcohol---it gets anywhere urine does(like under sill plates).
Nature's Miracle
I flooded the main floor subfloors---like mopping with a mop not wrung out---sloshing NM all over and letting it soak around the walls. The subfloors were hardboard, BTW. After the floors dried, I installed 15# roofing felt and hard maple unfinished flooring.
Flooded the basement areas(not as heavily, since the floor was concrete)---more like a mop half rung out. In the area that is now my wood shop, the carpet had been glued to the concrete and had to be scraped. My youngest son and eldest grandson wore hazmat suits to remove the carpet, and there were areas where the glue/backing did not come up completely. Next day---NO odor. NONE.
Now, about two years later, the lift pump for the AC condensate quit and the container over flowed. There is a basement drain, with a wall between the furnace and the drain. Some of the urine smell had gotten under that sill plate and the leaking water rejuvenated the odor. Half a cup of NM poured along that wall (10')removed that odor in about two hours.
Eight years later, and several water leaks in the basement---NO smell. Anywhere in the house. No sealer, no shellac---just Nature's Miracle.
Oh, yeah, the realtor's agent who worked with us was back to see the new floors---she could not believe how there was no remnant of the odor.