Recently I had to park my car in another location for a few days. Underneath pine trees in the hot weather that have bombarded my car with blobs of pitch. I went to a car wash, but of course that did nothing; I’ll bet there are few substances more impervious to water. No wonder they used it since ancient times to seal up things.
The pitch blobs attract dust that sticks to it, so my car starts to resemble a leopard with spots of dirt. Last year when I took it to the dealer for maintenance, they threw in a cleaning that got all of that off. I’m going back there for maintenance soon and hopefully get it all cleaned off. But if I needed to do it myself, what’s effective to use that won’t harm paint?
You could try one if the commercial bug&tar removers made for the purpose. Kerosene or Naptha (lighter fluid or Coleman stove gas) should work, and will not harm paint.
Baby oil, veggie oil, WD-40 will all remove the stuff. Then you can wash those off with soap and water. BTW, the pitch might remove your paint if you let it stay there.
I agree that you should take care of it sooner rather than later. I had friends that parked their cars under pine trees and it really messed up the finish.
All sorts of solvents work. They work better when it’s hot and the tar is softer. If you scrape the stuff when it’s hard it may take off paint. Catching dust doesn’t help, makes it harder.
I second using vegetable oil. then wrap a plastic scraper end in a rag and go to work on it. Nothing fully gets that stuff off without some elbow grease.
And that’s why I quoted your post; both of us were suggesting alcohol. I just suggested it in a different package. For a small drop of pitch, it was easy enough to carry a couple of alcohol pads in my pocket out to the parking lot.