|
Re: Control box
[Re: cudaman1969]
#3083697
10/05/22 11:54 PM
10/05/22 11:54 PM
|
Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 43,157 Bend,OR USA
Cab_Burge
I Win
|
I Win
Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 43,157
Bend,OR USA
|
I would try some lacquer thinner covering the goo and let it sit from 5 to 20 minutes and see if it will fallout or scrape out easier I remember faintly someone doing that years ago but I can't remember the details now
Last edited by Cab_Burge; 10/05/22 11:54 PM.
Mr.Cab Racing and winning with Mopars since 1964. (Old F--t, Huh)
|
|
|
Re: Control box
[Re: cudaman1969]
#3083860
10/06/22 03:41 PM
10/06/22 03:41 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 10,552 Rittman Ohio
fourgearsavoy
I Live Here
|
I Live Here
Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 10,552
Rittman Ohio
|
Anyone know what will dissolve that goo in the back of the factory electronic control boxes? Yeah just mount it on the inner fender of your brand new paint job and it will start melting in a few weeks I had an orange box do that before. Gus
64 Plymouth Savoy 493 Indy EZ's by Nick at Compu-Flow 5-Speed Richmond faceplate Liberty box Dana 60
|
|
|
Re: Control box
[Re: TJP]
#3084072
10/07/22 01:46 PM
10/07/22 01:46 PM
|
Joined: Apr 2003
Posts: 12,234 Looking for a way out of Middl...
IMGTX
I Live Here
|
I Live Here
Joined: Apr 2003
Posts: 12,234
Looking for a way out of Middl...
|
That video was with a circuit board. For circuit board electronics they are baked on the board in a heated chamber filled with an inert gas which acts like a flux to keep the oxygen out of the solder joints. They are heated a lot more than the 210 degrees boiling water will reach. Our older stuff was not IC chips but full size resisters and transistors so I would tend to agree with you that they are more heat prone but I think 210 degrees is still below what they see in our old cars in the summer heat.
|
|
|
|
|
|