> On Apr 23, 2023, at 12:54 PM, Fritz Mueller via cctalk 
> <cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
> 
> Hi folks,
> 
> I’ve been picking my way through a PDP-8/L restoration lately.  I’ve found 
> that everything in the machine is covered with a uniform layer of dark “soot” 
> (enough to blacken your hands while working with it) which I would like to 
> clean up.  Perhaps the “soot” is actually from a decomposed air filter, as I 
> don’t imagine this machine was operated in a smoky environment, and there is 
> no smoke odor.
> 
> I usually use 99 IPA and cleanroom wipes for spot cleaning these sorts of 
> things, but in this case there is so much of it that I feel that would just 
> push the soot around rather than clean it off.  I think some sort of actual 
> rinse would be needed here.
> 
> I’ve been eying the dishwasher, for the subset of flip chips that that are 
> just DIP logic, carbon comp resistors, and ceramic bypass caps, anyway.   But 
> I haven’t been brave enough to try that yet...  Most of the logic here has 
> date codes to ’68 or ’69, so I’m inclined to treat it gently.  Any 
> suggestions for approaches to clean this up?

Dish washer soap may be caustic.  Detergent for washing dishes by hand may be a 
better choice.

> Follow-on question: the majority of the legs on these old DIPs are showing 
> what I’d call “moderate” corrosion — nothing looks like it is in danger of 
> being eaten all the way through, but the process is underway.  I was 
> wondering if something like a light shellac or other inhibitor could be 
> brushed over these pins to at least slow their inevitable demise?

I wonder if you might be seeing corrosion caused by leftover flux.  Modern flux 
can be of the "water soluble" kind, which indeed washes away nicely with warm 
water; I've used that for surface mount projects.  The traditional flux is 
rosin flux.  That can be removed with a solvent but that wasn't necessarily 
done.  Amateur project built with that typically would not be cleaned, and that 
was generally considered ok.  A bit like modern "no clean" flux.  But flux is 
somewhat corrosive, and "no clean" may mean simply that it's not an issue 
within the life expectancy of the device.  So -- you might see if rosin flux 
remover does anything.

        paul

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