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A**R
So far effective
Effective on a deceptively small hole in the bathroom. On a different note the room feels warmer now. The material seems to have done a good job at greatly reducing the draught which is a welcome bonus. I was only thinking of keeping the mice out. The cat does not seem to spend so long in the bathroom now hoping for "toys".
R**R
Keeps mice out so far, but does rust.
I’m using this to fill 2 rows of broken ceramic tubes that must have been put in to help the damp problem. So far so good, but the project is on hold due to the stormy weather, and I notice that with all the rain the steel wool is rusting. Perhaps I should have adopted the solution given to one of the questions here, to smear it in motor oil.
P**N
Mesh does the job
Mesh is easy to roll and manoeuvre into tight spot's and no mice seen in this cupboard since. The gloves are rubber I think cloth gloves would be better and more practical.
S**.
Exactly what i needed...
AAA+++great goods great price easy transaction and delivered on time...I'm using this in conjunction with some expandable spray filler to make the void between my facia and soffit boards in the roof of our outhouse inaccessible to an infestation of brown rats. The outhouse is a brick building and not attached to our main property. It is mainly used for garden tools and storage. It's a mid-sized building with a high tiled roof. We've had the odd wood mouse in recent years but this summer we heard a lot of gnawing at night, I set up a humane trap (poison isn't an option due to family pets and small children running around), on a storage box near to where I first heard the gnawing and the first night caught a large rat, not a wood mouse. Unfortunately, the gnawing continued, so I set up a night vision security camera and found we had an infestation of rats, the traps have not been able to keep up. They are living in the void that runs along both sides of the roof and moving around in the space between the tiles and the internal insulation. Therefore, the remedy is wire wool lining the voids and then filling the void with expanding foam filler, the animals will try to chew through the hardened filler but they will stop when they reach the wire wool...I've used this remedy in the past at a different property, basically, if you can't eradicate them then make the place inhabitable...
J**N
Fits small gaps
Early days but seems to be right for the job. Best for smaller gaps. Got some chicken wire for the bigger spaces.
A**R
Ideal for hard to get to places
It works
W**S
Dangerously sharp, wear gloves.
This stuff Is literally the same microfibre wire that agent 47 from the hitman franchise uses, it will literally cut through skin like butter.Needless to say, I slashed the fingers off myself merely just removing this stuff from its packaging.Do not use this without thick gloves, or at the very least, shark proof mail gloves.How affective against mice? No clue... I'll let's you'd know when I get back from hospitalDangerous as hellUPDATE: since plugging up all holes I could find with this stuff, I've not seen nor hear them little geniuses since.
F**D
Humane and fuss free
After dealing with a mouse problem for months and not having any luck with humane traps (literally watched mice run in and out of them on multiple occasions) we tried this instead. Went around the whole flat looking for holes in the floor and we found loads of them - no wonder they were just walking right in. After blocking as many as we could, we noticed a substantial reduction in the amount of critters we saw wandering around the place.The wire is sharp though, wear gloves when handling. You might need more than you think - for three floors, I needed 3 rolls. You can cut it with scissors but they will need to be sharpened a lot.
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