I don't know if this will help anyone out there or not so here it goes. For those who have an auto. that sits through the winter in a garage or shed this might be helpful.

I have 2 pickup trucks. one is my do anything truck. a 2002 Nissan frontier and the other a 207 Toyota. The Toyota is mostly dedicated to pulling my fishing boat. so in the winter it sits in the shed with the boat. Last year I had trouble with the A/C not blowing good and the smell was terrible. I started looking and found that the A/C had a air filter and that the filter had a mouse nest on it. A large one. I removed the nest and vacuumed the area put in a new filter and thought i was ok. Well the mouse was not. He came back. after 2 more filters (at $17 each) i decided to get rid of the mouse. I used moth balls . I broke them up in small pcs and put them on the filter. This worked in getting rid of the mouse and after a couple of weeks i started airing out the truck again. it took a while but the smell of moth balls left. so this last winter i stored the truck with the moth balls and when i brought it out of storage i replace the filter and soaked it with faberese air freshener . I left the doors open for a couple of days and now the smell is all but gone.

I don't know if anyone else has had a similar experience but if you have i would like to know how you handled it. I've thought about mouse poison but then i would have the smell of a dead mouse in the truck. If nothing else those who service there own autos you might want to ck your A/C filters .