22

I have a laptop that got some soup spilled onto it between the space bar and the touchpad. Almost all of the soup ended up in the upper DIMM slot which sits underneath the keyboard.

I took the laptop apart and I've managed to clean and dry everything other than the internals of the DIMM slot. The slot has a dense, comb-like structure of pins which holds the greasy water in, and I cannot disassemble the DIMM slot in order to clean it thoroughly.

When I turn on the laptop it detects all available RAM and it works normally for about 15-20 minutes, after which it turns off. When I try to turn it on again it emits 1-3-3-1 beeps which means "Bad DIMM or DIMM slot". If I then take out DIMM chips, wipe them and clean the slot with a toothbrush it works again for a short time. I suspect that when the laptop heats up the grease in the DIMM slot melts a bit and short-circuits some pins inside.

I was wondering would it work if I used WD-40 with a straw to fill the DIMM slot, and then dry it with paper towels and a fan? The WD-40 should dissolve the grease and it dries faster than water, I'm just not sure whether after drying it leaves any conductive residues which would cause a short circuit inside the slot. Or is there something else I can try? Any thoughts and ideas are appreciated.

Boris B.
  • 325

3 Answers3

31

When it comes to slots and other hard-to-reach places on electronic boards, I often use a combination of Isopropyl alcohol (IPA) cleaner and compressed air. It is easy to damage pins inside the slot by using toothbrush or a toothpick. Just spray it well with Isopropyl alcohol, give it a gentle wipe and then give it a good blast with compressed air aiming directly into the slot. You can repeat the operation more then one time to achieve better results. You can buy both IPA and compressed air cans from ebay relatively cheap.

In regard to your idea of using WD40. I don't advise you to do that. From WD40 page on wiki:

The long-term active ingredient is a non-volatile, viscous oil which remains on the surface, providing lubrication and protection from moisture

You don't want to lubricate connectors on your motherboard. Even though multiple sources on the Internet say that mineral oil contained in WD40 is not conductive and it is often used to clean contacts in automotive industry. It is not suitable for computers. You will get problems with dust and grease buildup on oiled contacts.

Giacomo1968
  • 58,727
Art Gertner
  • 7,429
10

I had a similar problem removing grot from an SD card slot. WD40 is not the answer! The best stuff I know of for cleaning electronics is IPA (Isopropyl Alcohol) which is the same stuff used on some screen wipes. Its great for cleaning flux from circuit boards, but also gets off grease and oil quite nicely too.

Wrap a toothpick in a layer of kitchen roll or something similar, add a bit of IPA to it and then gently rub that in and out of the socket between and on the pins - try not to go side to side so as not to bend any of the pins. You may need to do it a few times with clean bits of kitchen roll as the old piece gets grotty. Once satisfied, wait for a couple of minutes for the IPA to fully evaporate and then put the memory back in and try again.

You should probably also clean the contacts of the memory board as well with IPA/kitchen roll, just to make sure there is no residue left on that. (Observe static precautions, ground yourself while working on the electronics).

1

What I do is pull the board out completely and take it to my workshop where I hook my degreasing gun to my compressor, turn the pressure down to 200kPa and blow the water out.

Once it looks dry I load the gun with IPA (isopropanol as mentioned by others) and repeat. IPA is hydrophilic and will get the last traces of moisture out.

For coffee or worse cola spills I might start with the IPA, cola in particular is nasty.