cleaning up computer...

Pelu

Golden Member
Mar 3, 2008
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hey guys... I hear someone saying that he try cleaning up a computer components with alchol lol... wondering if is true.. will alchol mess up the component.. after is is liquid.. wondering if this is true or a damp...



Moved to General Hardware.

Video Mod BFG10K.
 

Concillian

Diamond Member
May 26, 2004
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as long as power isn't applied, alcohol is fine.

Use some blow-off air afterwards and it will evaporate quickly, surface will be nice and dry.

Generally alcohol is only useed for cleaning off greasy stuff like the thermal interface between a chip and it's heatsink. There isn't much need to clean the rest of the surfaces. Just buy a can of compressed air and blow out as much of the dust as you can. It will be pretty caked on on the heatsinks and fans if it's been a while sincec you've cleaned. Then vacuum up the stuff you just knocked loose and close it up.
 

Pelu

Golden Member
Mar 3, 2008
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oh... anyway besides alcohol... what other stuff i should use... paper towel... just my bath towel, cake?
 

Pelu

Golden Member
Mar 3, 2008
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yeah but there is some sticky crap on it... i think this dust get sticky... maybe is mutant dust or something.. anyway i need to get rid of it....
 

AmberClad

Diamond Member
Jul 23, 2005
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Originally posted by: Pelu
oh... anyway besides alcohol... what other stuff i should use... paper towel... just my bath towel, cake?
A paper towel or bath towel might leave lint. Cake will leave crumbs and a sugary residue that could potentially attract vermin.

Try coffee filters.
 

Rotax

Senior member
Oct 10, 1999
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i use rubbing alcohol to clean off cores/heat sinks when applying/reapplying thermal compounds..

but for general cleaning of internal plastics? air can and damp paper towel for the dust thats stuck to fans, etc..
 

chizow

Diamond Member
Jun 26, 2001
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Q-tips + isopropyl alcohol for ICs, chips, components. Goo Gone/Isopropyl/Water and lint-free paper towels for metal cases, human interface devices, plastics. Distilled Water and lint-free paper towels for LCD screens.
 

taltamir

Lifer
Mar 21, 2004
13,576
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First, what are you cleaning? the only reasons you should ever bother cleaning is: 1. blocked pathways. (extremely unlikely to occur in lifetime of computer, or the owner, pigs will fly first) 2. just the box because it puffs dust into your face when you open it. 3. Fans and heatsinks when they are clogged.

start with a vacuum to suck out large dirt clumps. If you are fanatic about it, Continue with compressed air to blow away smaller dust ones that will not loosen by mere vacuum (not really necessary). Afterwards you COULD use alcohol or wipes, but why SHOULD you? its not something anyone sees, you are just taking unnecessary risks (lint, rusting, deposits, etc, depending on what materials you use to "clean"), and it will not puff dust in your face after a vacuum AND compressed air treatment.
 

Peelback79

Senior member
Oct 26, 2007
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I suggest you go the cake route. Most cake doesn't conduct electricity very well and when the rats come to eat the cake, their little tongues will lick every inch of your computer clean. Even the parts you can't reach! Just make sure to unplug your computer and leave it in a really damp environment. Preferably underneath a pier where those huge warf rats live.

Post before and after pics too please.



 

Denithor

Diamond Member
Apr 11, 2004
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Originally posted by: AmberClad
Originally posted by: Pelu
oh... anyway besides alcohol... what other stuff i should use... paper towel... just my bath towel, cake?
A paper towel or bath towel might leave lint. Cake will leave crumbs and a sugary residue that could potentially attract vermin.

Try coffee filters.

ROF:laugh:MAO

Originally posted by: Peelback79
I suggest you go the cake route. Most cake doesn't conduct electricity very well and when the rats come to eat the cake, their little tongues will lick every inch of your computer clean. Even the parts you can't reach! Just make sure to unplug your computer and leave it in a really damp environment. Preferably underneath a pier where those huge warf rats live.

Post before and after pics too please.

Ratties! I want to see pictures of the ratties!

BTW, I have pet rats so this is extra funny. Rat tongues are very soft and would definitely do a good job of cleaning out any cake crumbs you left behind. But they might nibble some wires or cables also, probably not the effect you're after...
 

Pelu

Golden Member
Mar 3, 2008
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Originally posted by: AmberClad
Originally posted by: Pelu
oh... anyway besides alcohol... what other stuff i should use... paper towel... just my bath towel, cake?
A paper towel or bath towel might leave lint. Cake will leave crumbs and a sugary residue that could potentially attract vermin.

Try coffee filters.

coffee filters... cake was messing around... are you messing too... because if you dotn.. i dont have those filters around.. kinda have vapor pressure coffee maker lol...
 

Pelu

Golden Member
Mar 3, 2008
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Originally posted by: taltamir
First, what are you cleaning? the only reasons you should ever bother cleaning is: 1. blocked pathways. (extremely unlikely to occur in lifetime of computer, or the owner, pigs will fly first) 2. just the box because it puffs dust into your face when you open it. 3. Fans and heatsinks when they are clogged.

start with a vacuum to suck out large dirt clumps. If you are fanatic about it, Continue with compressed air to blow away smaller dust ones that will not loosen by mere vacuum (not really necessary). Afterwards you COULD use alcohol or wipes, but why SHOULD you? its not something anyone sees, you are just taking unnecessary risks (lint, rusting, deposits, etc, depending on what materials you use to "clean"), and it will not puff dust in your face after a vacuum AND compressed air treatment.

clean up some strange marks in a card... the transistors itself...
 

mindless1

Diamond Member
Aug 11, 2001
8,752
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Alcohol and water or detergent solution will not harm any video card so long as the fan is removed.

There are many ways to clean a card, consider that after manufactured with today's water based fluxes, they clean them with hot detergent solution. Therefore, if the stickiness you see remaining on the card is some flux (I see this VERY often, the flux residue looks pretty transparent but after some time it turns a cloudy light tan color), use hot detergent solution and a toothbrush to scrub it away. Take the heatsink/fan off the card first, meaning you will need heatsink grease to put it back on after cleaning off the original thermal interface material.

For that matter, I've even washed fans themselves in hot detergent solution, but don't submerge them and don't make the solution very strong because you want to minimize, if not completely eliminate, any detergent getting inside the fan bearing. I suggest not cleaning a fan like this unless it is absolutely necessary, usually it is enough to take a paint brush and wipe the dust off.

There is nothing wrong with using alcohol, or contact cleaner, but be aware that these may dissolve the ink on the stickers affixed to the card, but for that matter getting the stickers wet will make them look bad too and either way it might effect whether the card is still under warranty. Do not use more aggressive solvents like acetone, as it may dissolve the plastic used on some heatsink mounting parts, fan assemblies, or covers.

Alcohol is better used to clean off the residue from soldering back when they used rosin based flux. It or an ammonia based cleaner like Mr. Clean are better than detergent solution alone if you have tar residue, like from an industrial environment or a heavy tobacco smoker. The bulk of the goo will come off by applying it and letting it sit with a paper towel over it then rinsing, but to get it really clean you'll need to use a tooth-brush to scrub the area.

If whatever you use leaves a residue, like goo-gone, or detergent solution, finish up by thoroughly rinsing that off. Plain tap water will suffice if it's a detergent solution but some other cleaners need an alcohol rinse, or an intermediate step of washing with detergent solution then a plain water rinse. After rinsing with plain water you must wait a long time for water under the chips to dry if you don't bake the card or point a fan at it. Even pointing a fan at one I wait an entire day after shaking excess water out. To speed up the drying time you can do a final rinse with pure alcohol, or even the 70% alcohol you find in drugstores, it will dry faster and is less conductive.

There is nothing special needed to wipe the card. Lint all over it is not a problem... you'd simply need to wipe the contacts when finished so they are clean. After all, the moment you put it in a system again there will be dust getting on it anyway. A regular paper towel does fine to wipe the contacts, it is not a biological experiment where a tiny piece of paper towel lint matters, the slot contacts will push those out of the way of they aren't excessive in quantity. However, after rinsing and shaking excess water (or other non-residue solvent) off the card, you don't need to manually wipe it dry. Just point a fan at it for a day.

Another reason to avoid wiping a card is that can create significant static electricity, and blowing off a card with compressed air or using a vacuum does too because of the movement of the dust particles at high speed. Often this won't be a problem, but it is far more likely to cause one than using alcohol or which type of paper products leave lint. The greatest likelihood of harm while handling or cleaning is generation of static charges.

Video cards, motherboards, memory, PSU - many different parts in a PC (besides the hard drive and optical) can get wet with no problem so long as they are completely dry before power is applied again. Just expect the stickers to look bad and the fans must be removed, heatsink grease reapplied if present. Also remember that water collects in connectors, shaking out excess and allowing ample drying time is a must.
 

AmberClad

Diamond Member
Jul 23, 2005
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Originally posted by: Pelu
Originally posted by: AmberClad
Originally posted by: Pelu
oh... anyway besides alcohol... what other stuff i should use... paper towel... just my bath towel, cake?
A paper towel or bath towel might leave lint. Cake will leave crumbs and a sugary residue that could potentially attract vermin.

Try coffee filters.

coffee filters... cake was messing around... are you messing too... because if you dotn.. i dont have those filters around.. kinda have vapor pressure coffee maker lol...
No, I wasn't messing around (not about the coffee filters anyway ;) ). They do work well as far as not leaving little bits of fiber. Paper towels will work in a pinch though.
 

nineball9

Senior member
Aug 10, 2003
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Contact cleaner cleans circuit boards very well. You can soak the board with it, which I've done on boards so dirty I could not read the stenciling. Evaporates rapidly, and disolves grease and oils better than alcohol; I've used it to clean ball bearings and it worked better than brake cleaner. It won't remove flux residue however.

TF solvent (1,1,1,2,-Tetraflouroethane) based contact cleaners work well for me, though I have not tried any of the replacement products on the market. Don't use a contact cleaner with silicone in it for cleaning circuit boards. As mindless1 noted, watch out that you don't wash any paper labels off; contact cleaner can disolve the adhesive, and will likely disolve lubricants in fans.

Contact cleaner works well on things besides electronics, but it's pretty darned expensive.

But as others have noted, it's unlikely you need to "wash" a PC board or its components. A can of compressed air (it's not actually air), careful vacuuming and a small natural bristle paint brush will clean up most PC's. You can dismantle case fans and the PSU fans if you really want to clean them, or try a Q-tip to reach the blades and housing if you don't want to dismantle them.

Good luck!
 

JackMDS

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 25, 1999
29,552
429
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If something fell onto a component take a tweezer and remove it or bolw away dust if there is alot of it.

Otherwise there is No real reason to clean up components there is nothing to gain and there is always the risk to damage something.

The last I herd the elecrons would move well inside even if there is some marking on the outside.