How To Save Your Belongings From Smoke Damage
10/20/2020 (Permalink)
A fire in your Ogden, UT, home can leave you reeling. Even after the flames are out, the effects of smoke and soot can linger in every nook, cranny and favorite old T-shirt. From taking your smoky clothes to your favorite dry-cleaning establishment to ultrasonic cleaning, the good news is that it may be possible to save many of your belongings after a home fire.
2 Ways to Save Your Belongings From Smoke Damage
1. Clothing
After a fire, the cleaning instructions on your clothes’ tags go out the window. First, remove any soot from your wardrobe by taking it outside and shaking as much as you can off.
Next, enlist the help of your fire damage restoration company to deodorize your garments. If you skip this step, those clothes are likely to smell like smoke even after cleaning. Fire damage mitigation technicians can perform an ozone treatment that removes smoke odor for good by breaking the smoke down at the molecular level.
After clothes have been thoroughly deodorized, you may choose to wash some at home and take others to your preferred dry-cleaning service.
2. Virtually Anything Else
Fire damage professionals can also remove smoke and soot from a variety of materials using ultrasonic cleaning. These surfaces and substances include:
- Glass
- Plastic
- Metal
- Ceramics
- Rubber
Ultrasonic content cleaning uses highly pressurized waves to remove stuck-on smoke and soot particles. It’s especially useful in cleaning hard-to-reach places, which is why it’s routinely used in the medical and jewelry industries. While a fire used to spell disaster for content storage, this modern form of cleaning has drastically increased the number of household items, furniture and beloved family heirlooms that can be rescued from smoke and soot.
After a fire, you have enough to worry about. Let the professionals take most of the work off your hands — save a visit to your dry-cleaning outlet, perhaps — by using their experience and equipment to restore as many of your belongings as possible to their pre-fire state.