i would put the pcb in the ultrasonic cleaner. then put it in water, then douse it in ipa to remove the water. anything else is unnecessary. you have to use distilled water or it will cause problems later. it looks fine, but its not.
Hell yeah man keep up the great videos, I just got a cleaner recently mainly for used gaming parts like controllers and stuff. I already bought some tec clean prior to watching the video and was like fuck me I could get like 4x the amount for that going to try simple green next time around.
Hey what kind of water you used in the ultrasonic cleaner? is it deionized water or something else? I've been looking around on google but somewhat I still unclear
If your tap water is behind filtration (around 5 micron) and a functioning water softener, you can just use tap water. If not, or you're uncertain, just use distilled water. It's around $1 per gallon.
@@InginHidupTenang Water isn't inherently bad for electronics, as long as the device dries thoroughly before receiving power. Minerals in typical water can deposit on the electronics and cause issues. Distilled water doesn't have all the minerals that typical tap water does.