Yes, I think the concerns of pH come to mind, windex can contain ammonia, a strong base, vinegar a dilute form of acetic acid.. The chemicals, if not neutralized can lead to advanced oxidation or corrosion of metals..I'm not recommending to use water per se; that is why I went the distance to point out that using a cleaner that evaporates rapidly is the better way to go - if anyone needs to do their own chassis cleaning - is all.
Yeah, I guess you can use alcohol. Thing is, alcohol sucks water right out of the air and mixes, so there is still water in it. You can read the percentage of alcohol/water right on the side of the bottle contents.Yes, I think the concerns of pH come to mind, windex can contain ammonia, a strong base, vinegar a dilute form of acetic acid.. The chemicals, if not neutralized can lead to advanced oxidation or corrosion of metals..
Anything besides a "light" solvent (alcohol, denatured alcohol) should probably be avoided, I'd hate to melt anything or erase solder mask/parts designators; so 99% isopropyl is what I use.
I like 99% isopropyl alcohol no softening plastics, thanks for the compressed air suggestion though......Thing is, alcohol sucks water right out of the air.. Then I hit it with carb cleaner or contact cleaner using care not to spray on any plastic part, as they will be softened by it.
the time he threw his printer on the floor and smashed it was epic..later on it turned out the pc cable was not plugged in ..that was about 5 years ago