Bought my first RPA. Bought second-hand via Gumtree. Came with three medium-firm cases by DJI and Pgytech.
I realise on admiring all this stuff closer at home that the cases all have fragrant oily spices/curry smells.
How to get rid of cooked food smells, please?
Waffle follows;
One case is still new with tags, having sat in the corner of the sellers small apartment for the last two years, I guess.
These cases don't smell on the inside. The seller was of southern asian background, terrific guy as he was, the evidence is there that he enjoyed cooking meals at home that are traditional of his cultural heritage.
A few years ago, I came across a pair of TNF gloves marketed for extreme alpinism - at an OpShop/charity store for AUD30. Still with tags they sell here in Australia for $190-230. But they smelt - actually the entire shop had smells like cooking oil not being vented.
I spoke to the manager, who said it came from a large cafe next door where their venting of fryers and ovens conflicted with the charity clothing store's air-conditioning unit. Penrith City Council refused to do anything. That cafe/takeaway sold somewhat bland Australian fare, not spicy...
I washed the gloves twice, I wiped them down in tea-tree oil, I put them in large container over-night with lemon peel and shook the container madly. I hung them outside in rain for three days. I convinced myself they were too large, and sold them for $50 to a guy who sailed a yacht from NZ to Antarctica to go mountaineering.
And now I have the problem again.
How to get rid of smells? I am thinking of half-cup of bicarb of soda (powder) into a garbage bag, then placing three drone cases in there for a few days.
I realise on admiring all this stuff closer at home that the cases all have fragrant oily spices/curry smells.
How to get rid of cooked food smells, please?
Waffle follows;
One case is still new with tags, having sat in the corner of the sellers small apartment for the last two years, I guess.
These cases don't smell on the inside. The seller was of southern asian background, terrific guy as he was, the evidence is there that he enjoyed cooking meals at home that are traditional of his cultural heritage.
A few years ago, I came across a pair of TNF gloves marketed for extreme alpinism - at an OpShop/charity store for AUD30. Still with tags they sell here in Australia for $190-230. But they smelt - actually the entire shop had smells like cooking oil not being vented.
I spoke to the manager, who said it came from a large cafe next door where their venting of fryers and ovens conflicted with the charity clothing store's air-conditioning unit. Penrith City Council refused to do anything. That cafe/takeaway sold somewhat bland Australian fare, not spicy...
I washed the gloves twice, I wiped them down in tea-tree oil, I put them in large container over-night with lemon peel and shook the container madly. I hung them outside in rain for three days. I convinced myself they were too large, and sold them for $50 to a guy who sailed a yacht from NZ to Antarctica to go mountaineering.
And now I have the problem again.
How to get rid of smells? I am thinking of half-cup of bicarb of soda (powder) into a garbage bag, then placing three drone cases in there for a few days.