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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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On Tue, 2 May 2017 08:39:44 +0100, Ian Jackson
wrote: In message , John Robertson writes On 2017/05/01 1:24 PM, Wade Garrett wrote: On 5/1/17 3:08 PM, Foxs Mercantile wrote: On 5/1/2017 12:00 PM, Retired wrote: According to WD-40's "List of 2000+ Uses" at https://wd40.com/files/pdf/wd_40_200...d_jan_2017.pdf "• Cleans gunk from electrical contacts" is one of them And most of the 2000 ideas are marketing hype. You're a regular party-pooper! Having cleaned the residue (glue like substance) of WD-40 from many an electrical unit I would say that it's only practical use is for preventing rust on tools. Everything else is hype. There are FAR better solvents out there than WD-40...and cheaper! Cheaper than the old can you've had in the tool-shed for the last 20 years, but which has been your saviour on the odd occasion when you've suddenly needed a general-purpose lubricant / switch cleaner / rusty nut freer / corrosion inhibitor ? I think there are 3 topics you're not supposed to talk about at work (since you have to continue to see those people): politics, religion, and WD-40. |
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