> I'm thinking Power Service isn't water soluble.

Nor is any oil.  That's the purpose of using a detergent, like Dawn:
to bind to the oil on one side of the molecule, and to water on the other.
Sounds like the aromatic light fractions have soaked in to something.
No substitute for un-soaking them back out.

Ozone (O3) sends in free oxygen to bind with the whatever, chemically
changing it to something else.  (Said something else presumably not stinking.)
That extra oxygen is like a third wheel on a date: the other two (normal O2) are
looking to scrape it off anywhere they can; it doesn't last long.

Of course, it also binds to things you wish it didn't, as it attacks organic
material indiscriminately.  Usually the stinky things are more fragile, and
die first.  But, long-term, ozone is bad for skin, leather, rubber, plastics, 
etc.

So, dosage!

-- Jim


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