Assuming dyes weren't added to the diet enough that it made the urine system, these kinds of pet stains you should be charging extra for.
I have never been completely sold on enapping for residential carpets that are more than mildly dirty. And this is one reason why.
If you want to eliminate pet stains, and the odor, then you need to use these:
http://waterclaw.com/ The spotlifter product. The other product is for flood damage.
Bridgepoint's PetZone. http://www.bridgepoint.com/spec_sheets/c..._sheet.pdf
This is amazing. You use a few scoops in a 5 gal bucket, fill with a gallon or two. Then you just SOAK the stain area, let it sit, then attach the spotlifter to an extractor and extract it dry. If its an old house with a wood floor that might be used again, then maybe not soak as much and do it twice.
I was called to clean a dark yellow large pet stain from a near brand new white as snow carpet. When I was done, I had no idea where the spot originally was. This cleans the carpet, and the carpet backing. When stuff gets spilled onto carpets - its in the backing also - in fact, most of the liquid is going to be in the backing, and its disgusting to know how much of that urine is in the backing. If you are not physically removing the urine, and all the dried debris from it that caused bacteria to form whenever it gets wet again, its not being cleaned.
The waterclaw is no joke. Once that is set on the extractor, you will need some effort even after releasing some valves to putt the waterclaw from the carpet.
I have never been completely sold on enapping for residential carpets that are more than mildly dirty. And this is one reason why.
If you want to eliminate pet stains, and the odor, then you need to use these:
http://waterclaw.com/ The spotlifter product. The other product is for flood damage.
Bridgepoint's PetZone. http://www.bridgepoint.com/spec_sheets/c..._sheet.pdf
This is amazing. You use a few scoops in a 5 gal bucket, fill with a gallon or two. Then you just SOAK the stain area, let it sit, then attach the spotlifter to an extractor and extract it dry. If its an old house with a wood floor that might be used again, then maybe not soak as much and do it twice.
I was called to clean a dark yellow large pet stain from a near brand new white as snow carpet. When I was done, I had no idea where the spot originally was. This cleans the carpet, and the carpet backing. When stuff gets spilled onto carpets - its in the backing also - in fact, most of the liquid is going to be in the backing, and its disgusting to know how much of that urine is in the backing. If you are not physically removing the urine, and all the dried debris from it that caused bacteria to form whenever it gets wet again, its not being cleaned.
The waterclaw is no joke. Once that is set on the extractor, you will need some effort even after releasing some valves to putt the waterclaw from the carpet.