^ Same here.
Been taking apart stuff and washing them with dish soap + lukewarm water for many years now. Everything still working. Just have to make sure stuff is dry before powering it on. Usually I have so many stuff to clean at once that I never get to assemble them back together for at least 3-4 days... so that leaves them plenty of time to dry, especially during the sunnier / warmer times of the year. I tend to avoid washing electronics when it's cloudy and rainy and/or humid, as that prolongs the drying time too much sometimes.
The only thing I DON'T wash with water are fans, for three reasons:
1) If they have ball bearings, that will usually decrease the life of the ball bearings. It also may decrease the service life of sleeve bearing fans due to soapy water washing some of the lubricant away.
2) Iron core on the stator tends to rust badly afterwards, particularly on the cheaper fans.
3) Some cheaper fans also use very porous magnets on the rotor (fan blade assy.), making that rust too.
So for fans, I just brush off the dust and then wipe everything with a wet wipe. If the fan bearing is noisy, I take it apart and fix that too... and while at it, do the cleaning with the wet wipe then, as it's easier to clean the fan when taken apart.
I also don't wash floppy drives, optical drives, and HDDs, obviously. Well for floppies and ODDs, I now regularly take them apart as far as I can (for ODD's, usually all the metal casing + plastic tray + bezzle) and wash only those parts.
HDDs just get a rub-down with a wet wipe and PCB taken off to clean with IPA if very dirty (plus, SATA RoHS drives frequently need their headamp contacts cleaned, particularly WD and Seagate.)
For PSUs, I only wash them if they were really too dirty/dusty... and only if I can allocate at least 1 week for them to dry afterwards. Same for LCD monitor PSUs. The reason for this is that the transformers tend to soak up water and take a bit longer for all of it to evaporate / go out of there. So 4-5 days under good sunlight is minimum recommended by me.
Archer57 wrote on 2025-06-16, 13:08:
I absolutely would not wash the PSU though and would just replace it.
With the number of socket A 5V-heavy systems I have, that would cost an arm and a leg every time to get a modern PSU with beefy enough 5V rails.
And it could be waste of a perfectly fine PSU.
Some older OEM machines with proprietary PSUs might make it particularly hard to find a replacement too.
So at this point, I almost always refurbish the original PSU, unless it was some gutless garbage that really was never fit to power the system.