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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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#41
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On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 02:18:17 -0500, "Ray L. Volts"
wrote: But I digress... Use products designed specifically for electronics use and you'll be happier with your repairs in the long run. I recommend using LPS instead of wd40. |
#42
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"Richard Henry" wrote in message news:cmQVc.123523$sh.72032@fed1read06...
Just this week I used WD-40 to lubricate the garden gate hinges and sprayed some on the cutters after pruning some shrubs. Years ago in youthful ignorance I tried to clean a coffee spill out of a computer keyboard with it. I eventually just got a new keyboard. If you can manage to sneak a squirt of WD40 into your slot-car motor just before a race, victory will be yours! Not, however, if the track is full-living-room sized and the race is more than 15 laps. Also the resulting aroma, while exceedingly pleasant, will give you away. Make sure not to spill any on the rear wheels, or you're *done*. Mitch |
#43
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Woody wrote: "Ken G." wrote in message ... There is a large ``cult`` against wd40 because someone chose to start it then the rest have not tried it and are hell bent that it wont work . For ordinary pot , switch , control cleaning wd40 works fine . More is not better . It does not leave gunk behind . The old favourite was carbon tetrachloride (if you can still get it) with a drop if machine oil in it - usually one drop of 3-in-1 in a teaspoonful of CTC. Yikes! Scary scary stuff! Carbon tet has been banned here since I was a young fellow, and that was back about the time they invented dirt Or dirty controls, anyway Don't even think about buying it. And if you should happen to have some, please get rid of it. Safely. Call your hazardous waste folks. Ken |
#44
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On Tue, 24 Aug 2004 03:29:52 GMT, Ken Weitzel
wrote: Woody wrote: "Ken G." wrote in message ... There is a large ``cult`` against wd40 because someone chose to start it then the rest have not tried it and are hell bent that it wont work . For ordinary pot , switch , control cleaning wd40 works fine . More is not better . It does not leave gunk behind . The old favourite was carbon tetrachloride (if you can still get it) with a drop if machine oil in it - usually one drop of 3-in-1 in a teaspoonful of CTC. Yikes! Scary scary stuff! Carbon tet has been banned here since I was a young fellow, and that was back about the time they invented dirt Or dirty controls, anyway Don't even think about buying it. And if you should happen to have some, please get rid of it. Safely. Call your hazardous waste folks. Ken Geez Ken, there are some of us who can and do handle hazardous materials in our work every day. Carbon Tet is way down on the list of some of the hazardous materials I've used. Just avoid ignition devices around it and have plenty of ventilation to avoid breathing any of the fumes. Look up the MSDS on use and handling and you'll be fine. |
#45
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On Mon, 23 Aug 2004 06:14:13 -0700, no sticky residue wrote:
On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 02:18:17 -0500, "Ray L. Volts" wrote: But I digress... Use products designed specifically for electronics use and you'll be happier with your repairs in the long run. I recommend using LPS instead of wd40. More specifically LPS #1. |
#46
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gothika wrote: On Tue, 24 Aug 2004 03:29:52 GMT, Ken Weitzel wrote: Woody wrote: "Ken G." wrote in message ... There is a large ``cult`` against wd40 because someone chose to start it then the rest have not tried it and are hell bent that it wont work . For ordinary pot , switch , control cleaning wd40 works fine . More is not better . It does not leave gunk behind . The old favourite was carbon tetrachloride (if you can still get it) with a drop if machine oil in it - usually one drop of 3-in-1 in a teaspoonful of CTC. Yikes! Scary scary stuff! Carbon tet has been banned here since I was a young fellow, and that was back about the time they invented dirt Or dirty controls, anyway Don't even think about buying it. And if you should happen to have some, please get rid of it. Safely. Call your hazardous waste folks. Ken Geez Ken, there are some of us who can and do handle hazardous materials in our work every day. Carbon Tet is way down on the list of some of the hazardous materials I've used. Just avoid ignition devices around it and have plenty of ventilation to avoid breathing any of the fumes. Look up the MSDS on use and handling and you'll be fine. Hi Gothika... We must be talking about different stuff... the stuff I used to clean controls with as a young fellow are now known to cause liver, kidney and central nervous system damage. Most likely a carcinogen. At high levels coma or even death. Can be taken by ingestion, breathing the fumes, skin contact, or drinking contaminated water. Add to that, it destroys the ozone layer. Must be different stuff, carbon tet isn't flammable either. Banned completely here; used only in a few industrial apps in your country. Read more... http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/tfacts30.html Take care. Ken |
#47
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On Tue, 24 Aug 2004 05:35:41 GMT, Ken Weitzel
wrote: gothika wrote: On Tue, 24 Aug 2004 03:29:52 GMT, Ken Weitzel wrote: Woody wrote: "Ken G." wrote in message ... There is a large ``cult`` against wd40 because someone chose to start it then the rest have not tried it and are hell bent that it wont work . For ordinary pot , switch , control cleaning wd40 works fine . More is not better . It does not leave gunk behind . The old favourite was carbon tetrachloride (if you can still get it) with a drop if machine oil in it - usually one drop of 3-in-1 in a teaspoonful of CTC. Yikes! Scary scary stuff! Carbon tet has been banned here since I was a young fellow, and that was back about the time they invented dirt Or dirty controls, anyway Don't even think about buying it. And if you should happen to have some, please get rid of it. Safely. Call your hazardous waste folks. Ken Geez Ken, there are some of us who can and do handle hazardous materials in our work every day. Carbon Tet is way down on the list of some of the hazardous materials I've used. Just avoid ignition devices around it and have plenty of ventilation to avoid breathing any of the fumes. Look up the MSDS on use and handling and you'll be fine. Hi Gothika... We must be talking about different stuff... the stuff I used to clean controls with as a young fellow are now known to cause liver, kidney and central nervous system damage. Most likely a carcinogen. At high levels coma or even death. Can be taken by ingestion, breathing the fumes, skin contact, or drinking contaminated water. Add to that, it destroys the ozone layer. Must be different stuff, carbon tet isn't flammable either. Banned completely here; used only in a few industrial apps in your country. Read more... http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/tfacts30.html Take care. Ken I've afeeling we're probably about the same age. I used Carbon tetrachloride in various apps for cleaning everthing from industrial electrical components to stripping optical coatings. Most of the grades I used were flammable and yes very toxic. I've had to use much worse. Try high grade ether, I used that for years and it can be a bug to contain or avoid inhalation or skin contact. Yet it's one really good super-solvent. If you REALLY want to sweat try packing and transporting weapons grade uranium or plutonium.(In my service days I worked on a hazardous material disposal squad and had to move everthing from old bombs/mines to ICBM components) |
#48
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gothika wrote to Ken:
I've afeeling we're probably about the same age. I used Carbon tetrachloride in various apps for cleaning everthing from industrial electrical components to stripping optical coatings. Most of the grades I used were flammable and yes very toxic. ???? It used to be used as a fire extinguisher. Don't take my word for it, though -- check it out again to refresh your memory. -- John Miller Email address: domain, n4vu.com; username, jsm It's hard to drive at the limit, but it's harder to know where the limits are. -- Stirling Moss |
#49
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"gothika" bravely wrote to "All" (24 Aug 04 00:01:48)
--- on the heady topic of " Safe to use WD40 as switch or potentiometer cleaner?" go From: gothika go On Tue, 24 Aug 2004 03:29:52 GMT, Ken Weitzel go wrote: Woody wrote: "Ken G." wrote in message ... There is a large ``cult`` against wd40 because someone chose to start it then the rest have not tried it and are hell bent that it wont work . For ordinary pot , switch , control cleaning wd40 works fine . More is not better . It does not leave gunk behind . The old favourite was carbon tetrachloride (if you can still get it) with a drop if machine oil in it - usually one drop of 3-in-1 in a teaspoonful of CTC. Yikes! Scary scary stuff! Carbon tet has been banned here since I was a young fellow, and that was back about the time they invented dirt Or dirty controls, anyway Don't even think about buying it. And if you should happen to have some, please get rid of it. Safely. Call your hazardous waste folks. Ken go Geez Ken, there are some of us who can and do handle hazardous go materials in our work every day. go Carbon Tet is way down on the list of some of the hazardous materials go I've used. go Just avoid ignition devices around it and have plenty of ventilation go to avoid breathing any of the fumes. go Look up the MSDS on use and handling and you'll be fine. I went to the car parts mart the other day looking for phosphoric acid to pickle a bit of metal before painting and the clerk drone told me they don't sell dangerous chemicals anymore because of environmental rules, etc. So I turned around and went to the electric soldering department and picked up a bottle of hydrochloric acid and showed it to him. Some people... A+s+i+m+o+v .... Dunno if we'll get that past the CSA und UL 'owever. |
#50
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You reminded me that you can drastically extend the life of a worn out
ribbon on a dot matrix printer by opening the cassette and spraying the ribbon with WD40. Sounds daft but works extremely well, a friend has ribbons that have been sprayed 3 or 4 times and are years old and still working. -- Keith Willcocks (remove .nospam from address to reply) "mitch perkins" wrote in message om... "Richard Henry" wrote in message news:cmQVc.123523$sh.72032@fed1read06... Just this week I used WD-40 to lubricate the garden gate hinges and sprayed some on the cutters after pruning some shrubs. Years ago in youthful ignorance I tried to clean a coffee spill out of a computer keyboard with it. I eventually just got a new keyboard. If you can manage to sneak a squirt of WD40 into your slot-car motor just before a race, victory will be yours! Not, however, if the track is full-living-room sized and the race is more than 15 laps. Also the resulting aroma, while exceedingly pleasant, will give you away. Make sure not to spill any on the rear wheels, or you're *done*. Mitch |
#51
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"Keith Willcocks" wrote in message ...
"mitch perkins" wrote in message om... "Richard Henry" wrote in message news:cmQVc.123523$sh.72032@fed1read06... Just this week I used WD-40 to lubricate the garden gate hinges and sprayed some on the cutters after pruning some shrubs. Years ago in youthful ignorance I tried to clean a coffee spill out of a computer keyboard with it. I eventually just got a new keyboard. If you can manage to sneak a squirt of WD40 into your slot-car motor just before a race, victory will be yours! Not, however, if the track is full-living-room sized and the race is more than 15 laps. Also the resulting aroma, while exceedingly pleasant, will give you away. Make sure not to spill any on the rear wheels, or you're *done*. You reminded me that you can drastically extend the life of a worn out ribbon on a dot matrix printer by opening the cassette and spraying the ribbon with WD40. Sounds daft but works extremely well, a friend has ribbons that have been sprayed 3 or 4 times and are years old and still working. Really? Me? I had an old VCR that had an audio-dub feature. We would tape Star Trek and The X Files and then dub in the most ridiculous dialogue. Always something to do with hats or cheese or the captains Bovril stash. Those two shows were perfect because the actors are so *serious*. Anyway, when it began to die, (the thing had a fake wood finish!), I somehow got the idea to open the tape slot and - *spray everything inside with alcohol*. Punchline: it added at least a year to the life of a dear old friend. (I think the alcohol "re-stickied" the belts.) Moral: they don't make 'em like they used to. Mitch |
#52
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#53
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In article ,
Double-A wrote: I had a track-drive garage door opener that was sticking. I sprayed it with WD40 and it worked like a charm to keep the thing operating trouble free for a couple more months. The plastic links in the track-drive suffered catastrophic failure, probably due to exposure of the plastic to the solvent in WD40! Had to replace the whole thing. Some people use WD40 on their arthritic knees (well if it works on hinges...). Fact is that the solvent in WD40 is DMSO, the same substance once touted for its miraculous healing qualities. The Material Safety Data Sheet for WD-40 aerosol makes no mention of DMSO. The hazardous ingredients listed are "aliphatic petroleum distillates", "petroleum base oil", "LVP hydrocarbon fluid", and carbon dioxide. Each of these ingredients is identified by a specific CAS registry number, and none of the numbers match the CAS for dimethyl sulfoxide (67-68-5). I suspect that the idea that WD-40 contains DMSO is simply an urban legend. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#54
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Is it safe to use WD40 as a switch (or potentiometer) cleaner on circuit boards and in electronic equipment? I have used WD40 to clean residue of silicone sealant from acrylic shower tub in my bathroom! Spray it on, wait 30 seconds and clean it with wooden spatula or figernails and paper towel. Repeat on thicker patches. Kind regards! Tadeusz |
#55
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"Tadeusz Jerzy Korsak" wrote in message ... Is it safe to use WD40 as a switch (or potentiometer) cleaner on circuit boards and in electronic equipment? I have used WD40 to clean residue of silicone sealant from acrylic shower tub in my bathroom! Spray it on, wait 30 seconds and clean it with wooden spatula or figernails and paper towel. Repeat on thicker patches. Kind regards! Tadeusz Another thin that WD is good for is removing tape and label adhesive residue. I don't know why, but it works almost as well as stuff actually made for the purpose. jak |
#56
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On Mon, 30 Aug 2004 08:46:40 -0500, the renowned "jakdedert"
wrote: "Tadeusz Jerzy Korsak" wrote in message ... Is it safe to use WD40 as a switch (or potentiometer) cleaner on circuit boards and in electronic equipment? I have used WD40 to clean residue of silicone sealant from acrylic shower tub in my bathroom! Spray it on, wait 30 seconds and clean it with wooden spatula or figernails and paper towel. Repeat on thicker patches. Kind regards! Tadeusz Another thin that WD is good for is removing tape and label adhesive residue. I don't know why, but it works almost as well as stuff actually made for the purpose. jak It's got a lot of solvent in it. I've got some strange orange oil natural stuff that works fairly well and is allegedly less toxic. I like the smell of WD40 better. Best regards, Spehro Pefhany -- "it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward" Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com |
#57
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On Mon, 30 Aug 2004 08:46:40 -0500, "jakdedert"
wrote: "Tadeusz Jerzy Korsak" wrote in message ... Is it safe to use WD40 as a switch (or potentiometer) cleaner on circuit boards and in electronic equipment? I have used WD40 to clean residue of silicone sealant from acrylic shower tub in my bathroom! Spray it on, wait 30 seconds and clean it with wooden spatula or figernails and paper towel. Repeat on thicker patches. Kind regards! Tadeusz Another thin that WD is good for is removing tape and label adhesive residue. I don't know why, but it works almost as well as stuff actually made for the purpose. jak Could be all that kerosene.(petroleum distillates.) |
#58
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jakdedert wrote:
"Tadeusz Jerzy Korsak" wrote in message ... I have used WD40 to clean residue of silicone sealant from acrylic shower tub in my bathroom! Vinegar works better or as well. Acetic acid is one of the solvents in most silicone caulks. And it doesn't leave an oily residue. |
#59
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On Tue, 31 Aug 2004 02:22:51 -0400, TMG wrote:
jakdedert wrote: "Tadeusz Jerzy Korsak" wrote in message ... I have used WD40 to clean residue of silicone sealant from acrylic shower tub in my bathroom! Vinegar works better or as well. Acetic acid is one of the solvents in most silicone caulks. And it doesn't leave an oily residue. Acetic acid is good. I use toulol or toulene based carbuerator cleaner.(It comes in a spray can, also has acetone.) It's a good silicone solvent and cleans just about anything off. Good for removing paper labels and adhesive off of glass jars. 78 cents a can at Wal-Mart. Super Tech brand. Also good for cleaning video and audio heads and tape guides, rollers.(Just spray it on a swab and wipe, leaves no residue.) |
#60
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"gothika" wrote in message ... On Tue, 31 Aug 2004 02:22:51 -0400, TMG wrote: jakdedert wrote: "Tadeusz Jerzy Korsak" wrote in message ... I have used WD40 to clean residue of silicone sealant from acrylic shower tub in my bathroom! Vinegar works better or as well. Acetic acid is one of the solvents in most silicone caulks. And it doesn't leave an oily residue. Acetic acid is good. I use toulol or toulene based carbuerator cleaner.(It comes in a spray can, also has acetone.) It's a good silicone solvent and cleans just about anything off. Good for removing paper labels and adhesive off of glass jars. 78 cents a can at Wal-Mart. Super Tech brand. Also good for cleaning video and audio heads and tape guides, rollers.(Just spray it on a swab and wipe, leaves no residue.) Don't breathe the vapors or get any on your skin. I guess it's ok to look at it. |
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