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There are fruit flies all over this truck

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Dear Car Talk: Iamat my wits’ end with this. I have fruit flies all over the cabin of my 2012 GMC Sierra 1500.

I never ever eat fruit to begin with, and I never allow anyone else to eat it in my truck. I have fogged the interior with enough RAID to cause genetic mutations in my grandchild­ren, to no avail. They eventually return within a week.

Could it be that, due to the fruit flies’ ability to mutate, they have developed into a strain of “super flies”?

Short of using a flame thrower, I can’t imagine what else to do here.

— David

Fruit flies like rotting fruit; fruit that’s fermenting. And you’ve already tried the basic remedies.

You’ve eliminated any visible sources of food for them, and you’ve even resorted to the arena of chemical warfare. So what’s going on?

Honestly, I don’t know. But I’m guessing there’s a source of food for them somewhere in your truck.

While you don’t allow people to eat fruit in your truck, if you have kids, and they sit in the back where you can’t see them, all bets are off.

It’s possible someone dropped something onto the carpet and then mashed it in with a shoe to try to hide the evidence. So a thorough upholstery and carpet cleaning is a good place to start.

My other guess is that there’s some organic material that’s dropping onto the hood of your car, and entering the ventilatio­n system through the cowl (the fresh air vents where your windshield meets the hood).

Once you’re sure you’re not continuall­y replenishi­ng their food supply from above, then the solution may involve nuking the cowl area with the fan on full blast.

If that doesn’t work, you may need to get into the HVAC system itself to clean it out. That stuff is all tucked up under the dashboard, and not easy to get to.

So we’ll hope that a thorough cleaning, more judicious parking, and maybe some highly targeted chemical applicatio­n ends your infestatio­n, David.

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