Kahenraz wrote on 2024-01-20, 14:29:
Thermalwrong wrote on 2024-01-20, 00:41:
I found that Isopropyl alcohol didn't touch it but melamine sponge did, then I found that regular old soap gets it all very clean. I think it's cigarette smoke stuff attached to the outside of the case?
Citrus based cleaners like Goo Gone are your best friend for things that isopropyl won't break up on its own. I've also used Dawn dish soap for anything that has a lot of grease.
Once you find what works for you, it would be advisable to disassemble everything to bits to make sure you've gotten everything clean.
It cleaned up very nicely: Re: What retro activity did you get up to today?
In the end instead of stripping it all I just used one damp microfibre cloth with soap on it to scrub most of the dirt off, then another damp non-soapy microfibre cloth to clean up the rest, then paper towels / clean MF cloth for drying. Rinsing the MF cloths after was horrendous, I'm pretty sure this was in a smoking area for a very long time - but it's quite clean now. The Standby / RTC NiMH batteries hadn't done much damage and have been removed.
Really if not for the smashed screen I'd say this Tecra 750DVD is more complete than my original one which took a very long time for me to source the DVD-ROM drive.
Kahenraz wrote on 2024-01-20, 18:37:Beware of IBM "Deathstar" drives. […]
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AlessandroB wrote on 2024-01-20, 16:22:
I try to have all IBM Branded in my IBM computer, even Hard disk and RAM. This is for my PentiumII/III class IBM
Beware of IBM "Deathstar" drives.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deskstar
I used to buy IBM branded drives in the 90s, believing that they would carry the brand reliability. I don't remember the details of the failure exactly, but I think my 80GB drive suddenly began reporting itself as having a capacity of 8MB everywhere, including my bootable partition manager. All data was lost.
Oof - kinda funny after enough years since HGST was very highly regarded in recent years til the WD acquisition. I fell prey to the 75GXP deathstar too though, lost whole drives a couple of times over since the first drive was RMA'd and the reconditioned one failed not long after. It was a good lesson for keeping backups 😀
At this point though, I think it was only the 60GXP and 75GXP that had issues, later models if they're still running are likely to keep running for a long time still, if you can put up with the bearing noise