P
Phil Allison
Guest
Hi to all,
A poster on a US guitar amp newsgroup managed to set his amp on fire using
a contact cleaner spray. Apparently he used a fair amount of the stuff down
each jack socket hole then operated the AC switch - it went "woooof " and
he had a raging fire inside.
Most contact cleaners contain alcohol as a solvent, possibly isopropyl,
this has a low flash point of 11 degrees C. The cans all have a red badge
with "flammable liquid 3" - which seems to be code for ***major fire
hazard**.
A can of the humble WD40 has the same red badge with "flammable gas 2" -
which is a bit mysterious since the propellant is CO2. The flash point of
WD40 is much higher at 55 degrees C, according to an official chemical
hazard data sheet on the web. Far as I can tell, unlike alcohol, its fumes
are not prone to igniting from a spark unless the liquid is heated
considerably first.
Seems like a dam good reason to stay away from the expensive evaporative
cleaners in favour of WD40.
............... Phil
A poster on a US guitar amp newsgroup managed to set his amp on fire using
a contact cleaner spray. Apparently he used a fair amount of the stuff down
each jack socket hole then operated the AC switch - it went "woooof " and
he had a raging fire inside.
Most contact cleaners contain alcohol as a solvent, possibly isopropyl,
this has a low flash point of 11 degrees C. The cans all have a red badge
with "flammable liquid 3" - which seems to be code for ***major fire
hazard**.
A can of the humble WD40 has the same red badge with "flammable gas 2" -
which is a bit mysterious since the propellant is CO2. The flash point of
WD40 is much higher at 55 degrees C, according to an official chemical
hazard data sheet on the web. Far as I can tell, unlike alcohol, its fumes
are not prone to igniting from a spark unless the liquid is heated
considerably first.
Seems like a dam good reason to stay away from the expensive evaporative
cleaners in favour of WD40.
............... Phil