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Smoking In Your Car

N2Advnture

Active Member
Joined
Oct 10, 2005
Messages
1,839
As a cigar smoker (16+ years for me), there comes a time when you decide that smoking a cigar in your car out weighs the desire to retain that new car smell. Like many areas in life, cigars win – LOL!

I am the guy that drives everywhere, averaging about 26,000 miles a year on my vehicles so when I bought my last SUV a few years ago, I developed a process to prevent my truck from getting that stale smokey smell from my cigar enjoyment during my 1 hour commute and long trips during the motorcycle racing season.

Non smokers have commented that they would never had known that I smoke cigars (and cigarettes) daily in my truck.

1.) Crack the driver's window (obviously)

2.) Open the "fresh air" vent (not the recirculating vent) and turn it on low

3.) Turn the vent adjustment so the fresh air is flowing into your floor board (the typical symbol is the towards the feet on the controls)

4.) Smoke away :-)

A couple of tips here are:

1.) Pick up some "rain guards" that fit your vehicle. These allow you to crack the widow without rain coming in. The are great for creating a dead air space that allows you to easily flick your ash out the window without it blowing back in your vehicle.

2.) If you don't want the rain guards, use the dead space created by the driver's side mirror.

3.) Use a cigar Bobken (cupholder ashtray) – Car ashtrays are so tiny now that cigars never seem to fit them. I guess that's why most people put change in them.

Simple right?

Well it gets more involved since smoking the vehicle isn't the real problem. The problem exists afterwards when you have that stale smoke smell in your vehicle. Here is a list of tips for cleaning.

Clean all your windows with a vinegar based cleaner like Windex. This will remove the smoke residue on your windows which greatly contributes to the stale smell.

Wipe down all the hard surfaces in the interior with a 6 parts to 1 mixture of Woolite and warm water. You can even lightly spray this on the head liner and wipe it down with a soft towel.

The hardest and most important part is cleaning the seats – especially if you have a cloth interior. After each drive where I smoke, I spray with Fabreeze. Then once every week or two, I sprinkle baking soda based carpet deodorizing on the seats and floor. I usually do this whenever I am getting my car cleaned.

Many of the newer vehicles have a carbon cabin filter. Replace this every 3 months. They usually run about $25 but it's worth as most of the air in your car runs through this device.

3 times a year I steam clean my interior. I bought a Bissell hand held steam cleaner for under $100 and it works very well. I use it to clean the seats, carpet, floor mats, headliner and door panels.

While this seems incredibly involved, you quickly get used to the procedure and it's really not as bad as it sounds.

With the recent discovery of the Pureayre product, I expect the procedure to be greatly reduced and with better results. Instead of using Fabreeze (which contains tons of chemicals), I plan on using the Pureayre in it's place. I also intend on cleaning the vehicle's vent system by applying the Pureayre directly into the engine's air intake while running the fresh air vents.

Hope this translates well and happy smoking my friends!

~Mark
 
Yep, I do steps 1-4 every time I smoke in my car.

Great advice Mark!
 
Great tips, thanks. I put about 30k on my F-250 every year so I greatly appreciate them.

Here is one more that works for me too. With your car in park, turn the ignition on but don't start the motor. Turn your fresh air vent on high. Jump outside the vehicle and spray some Lysol, or anything that has some germ killing stuff in it, on the intake below the windshield. You will start to smell it coming out of the vents after a few seconds. Flip back and forth between the recirc. and fresh air positions a few times. Repeat. This really helps, if and when you do get some smoke, or any other funky odors in the vent system.
 
This info will be put to good use. I thought this was a lost cause. No more pine tree air fresheners.
 
I let it stink so nobody asks me to drive. Have you seen gas prices in NY??
 
Good info, Mark. I hadn't thought about the windows. I also don't smoke much in my car, but it's good info to keep in mind.
 
Thanks for the great tips, Mark...I may use this in the near future...if my wife doesn't find out!
 
Very cool, reading through this it was like, "yep, I do that" till you got to the steam cleaning part. Very good read, thanks for taking the time to do it.

Wade
 
I just drop the top and spray the interior with Ocean air!
211177004_f38b3b273c_o.jpg


...and I never smoke in the Benz!
T :cool:
 
Never smoked in my car, never will!

You may get most of the smell out if you only smoke cigars, you
will not get it all. If you smoke cigarettes, forget it. No matter
what you do, the smell or traces thereof, will always remain in the car.

boonedoggle - you have gone crazy again :laugh:, that avatar is disturbing! ???

Brian
 
I use a cheap ionic breeze air freshner I got off cbid for 10 bucks, that and never use the recirc option. Always have the window open, works wonders.
 
Is there a difference when you don't use the ionic breeze air freshener? I was thinking about getting one, but it looks too small to filter a lot of air. You don't use fragrance fresheners right?
 
Is there a difference when you don't use the ionic breeze air freshener? I was thinking about getting one, but it looks too small to filter a lot of air. You don't use fragrance fresheners right?


I use both. Trust me the small one will work over night, it makes your car smell like lemon grass. It does rid the smoke smell however. I don't use the ionic filter all the time. Maybe one week a month. I just plug it in when I notice the smell. Leave it in for a week and start the cycle over again.
 
Try as I might, smoking in my car always ends up a disaster. Anyone who has driven on the Garden State Parkway could probobly tell you, it's not a great idea to try to flick your ashes outside, half your cigar will probobly snap off from the 80mph wind blowback. I aim for the cupholder and miss half the time, leaving the center console and passenger side floor an ashy mess. And relights are always fun, I've thrown a bit of a curveball to a few passengers when I ask them to hold the wheel while I strike a match. :laugh:
 
Try as I might, smoking in my car always ends up a disaster. Anyone who has driven on the Garden State Parkway could probobly tell you, it's not a great idea to try to flick your ashes outside, half your cigar will probobly snap off from the 80mph wind blowback. I aim for the cupholder and miss half the time, leaving the center console and passenger side floor an ashy mess. And relights are always fun, I've thrown a bit of a curveball to a few passengers when I ask them to hold the wheel while I strike a match. :laugh:
You should see the cigarettes that I've lost between The Oranges and Belmar :(
 
When I smoke in my car I roll down all the windows and usually don't worry about the air controls...

Also, on today's like today when it's nice, I leave my windows down all day long. I can look out my office and see my car, so I'm not too worried about anything happening.
 
I smoke in my 2 or 3 in my truck every day. What smell are you talking about? I don't smell anythig. Hey, you smell anything?
 
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