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[email protected] March 21st 06 07:26 PM

Removing battery corrosion
 
I have a remote for a VCR that was not being used. The batteries
leaked and left corosion on the contacts inside. (Alkaline
batteries). The contacts are not deteriorated, but are corroded.
What is the best way to clean them, and neutralize any chemical
reaction to prevent further damage?

Any tips?

Thanks

Mark


PipeDown March 21st 06 07:55 PM

Removing battery corrosion
 
Soapy water on a q-tip. Not too much, don't want to leave any water behind.
A small amount of baking soda will also help by neutralizing any acid and
acting as an abrasive, be sure to remove all of that too.

Sometimes need to scratch up the contact area with a x-acto blade or file if
corrosion is thick.

If it were really messy, you can often remove the circuit board and clean
all the parts in ISO alcohol then dry thoroughly then reassemble.




wrote in message
...
I have a remote for a VCR that was not being used. The batteries
leaked and left corosion on the contacts inside. (Alkaline
batteries). The contacts are not deteriorated, but are corroded.
What is the best way to clean them, and neutralize any chemical
reaction to prevent further damage?

Any tips?

Thanks

Mark




Jim Yanik March 21st 06 08:03 PM

Removing battery corrosion
 
wrote in
:

I have a remote for a VCR that was not being used. The batteries
leaked and left corosion on the contacts inside. (Alkaline
batteries). The contacts are not deteriorated, but are corroded.
What is the best way to clean them, and neutralize any chemical
reaction to prevent further damage?

Any tips?

Thanks

Mark



Household vinegar.
(a mild acid to neutralize the alkaline battery electrolyte)

Since the plating has probably been eaten away,the exposed spring metal
will oxidize.Perhaps a light coating of Vaseline will help there.


I find that Duracells leak more than Everready or Fuji cells.
I no longer use Duracells.

--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net

tom March 21st 06 08:24 PM

Removing battery corrosion
 

wrote in message
...
I have a remote for a VCR that was not being used. The batteries
leaked and left corosion on the contacts inside. (Alkaline
batteries). The contacts are not deteriorated, but are corroded.
What is the best way to clean them, and neutralize any chemical
reaction to prevent further damage?

Any tips?

Thanks

Mark


That happened to me a few years ago. Contacted the Duracell, sent the remote
and they sent me a check that covered about 90% of the cost of a new remote.



z March 21st 06 09:32 PM

Removing battery corrosion
 

Jim Yanik wrote:
wrote in
:

I have a remote for a VCR that was not being used. The batteries
leaked and left corosion on the contacts inside. (Alkaline
batteries). The contacts are not deteriorated, but are corroded.
What is the best way to clean them, and neutralize any chemical
reaction to prevent further damage?

Any tips?

Thanks

Mark



Household vinegar.
(a mild acid to neutralize the alkaline battery electrolyte)

Since the plating has probably been eaten away,the exposed spring metal
will oxidize.Perhaps a light coating of Vaseline will help there.


An ink eraser like you find on the end of stick-pens sometimes (like a
pencil eraser but a bit grittier) is like the ideal tool for cleaning
connections, and this is no exception. I also deliver a shot of WD-40
afterwards to clean off the loose crud and provide some further
anti-oxidation. (i also use WD-40 as control-cleaner for electronics
when i don't have the real stuff handy, seems to work OK).



I find that Duracells leak more than Everready or Fuji cells.
I no longer use Duracells.


I found that Rayovacs leak more than Eveready or Duracell.


--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net




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