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On September 13 2011 15:29 Chairman Ray wrote: Unplug it, and dry it. Make sure it's perfectly dry before using again. Compressed air will work fine.
Best answer if you dont want to open the keyboard.
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On September 13 2011 18:36 iloveav wrote:Show nested quote +On September 13 2011 08:03 Medrea wrote: Rather than leave it outside where there is humidity, better to leave it in the refrigerator where it is very dry. I think this guy wants you to destroy your keyboard (envy of a filco?). Refrigerator lowers the "boiling point of water molecules" making the last longer in their liquid form..... Make sure its dry first, you could disasamble the unit (assuming its possible), let the parts dry apart, and then build it back. That way you make sure everything is dry. (Do this if you know your way around electronics, some parts there might be tricky).
How exactly does a refrigerator lower the boiling point? I can't imagine the pressure being much different than outside (Wouldn't make much difference anyway or what it has to do with your point). Maybe you should look up "relative humidity" and evaporation.
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Same thing happened to me. I don't think it really matters because of the structure of the keyboard (the caps protecting the switches and the switches slightly elevated from the board) but out of safety, I did the rice trick that was described earlier.
Keyboard is still 100% fine.
Sometimes, it's great to realize you get what you pay for.
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Use the key puller and take off all the keys! Compressed air like someone already stated! Save the board! But from my experience these boards do tank a ton of damage. You should be fine, just don't over think it and become paranoid. I understand how you feel though. =\
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On September 13 2011 19:50 nam nam wrote:Show nested quote +On September 13 2011 18:36 iloveav wrote:On September 13 2011 08:03 Medrea wrote: Rather than leave it outside where there is humidity, better to leave it in the refrigerator where it is very dry. I think this guy wants you to destroy your keyboard (envy of a filco?). Refrigerator lowers the "boiling point of water molecules" making the last longer in their liquid form..... Make sure its dry first, you could disasamble the unit (assuming its possible), let the parts dry apart, and then build it back. That way you make sure everything is dry. (Do this if you know your way around electronics, some parts there might be tricky). How exactly does a refrigerator lower the boiling point? I can't imagine the pressure being much different than outside (Wouldn't make much difference anyway or what it has to do with your point). Maybe you should look up "relative humidity" and evaporation.
Refriges don't lower the boiling point of anything by an appreciable amount anyway, that guy is talking out of his butt. There are a few derpy comments about it. Refrigerators cool by using a coolant which we call....uh R-134A I think? Have we moved beyond that one? Anyway they cool by compressing this refrigerant and then reexpanding it with a lower kinetic value, thus cooling your food and shit.
Most modern refrigerators have a low and a high humidity drawer, just dont put your waterlogged device in the high humidity drawer or it wont dry out for a longer time.
If you still have one of the refrigerators from like, the 50's? Yeah stay away from it.
Is this really not common knowledge on TL? The lowered humidity of a refrigerator is ideal for removing water from tight spaces aka electronics, and a lot faster than ambient air.
If you don't believe me look it up, or talk to anyone in the culinary world, fridge dries out everything.
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The water doesn't hurt them, the minerals in the water after it dries on the board is whats damaging.
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ah the good old water damage : (
for my phone my dad just cooked it in the minioven for a while.... i can't imagine a fridge being too bad for the same deal, but it's a scary idea anyway a little too much of either will kill your chances, obviously
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Not sure if this is available to you, but I know one of the popular "fixes" for wet blackberrys are leaving it in a little pot/cup of rice.
True, the keyboard is definitely a lot bigger and probably requires a lot of rice, but maybe if you have an extra pillowcase, or a thin cloth bag that can be closed on one end, and if you have access to some rice (maybe a quick visit to bulk food store), it's worth a shot.
Fill the pillowcase with some rice, and try to shake it out so it lays evenly on the keys, and then let it hopefully absorb the moisture.
It's worth a try considering it's a keyboard I'm assuming you love/would hate to lose.
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On September 14 2011 00:12 rawrss wrote: Not sure if this is available to you, but I know one of the popular "fixes" for wet blackberrys are leaving it in a little pot/cup of rice.
True, the keyboard is definitely a lot bigger and probably requires a lot of rice, but maybe if you have an extra pillowcase, or a thin cloth bag that can be closed on one end, and if you have access to some rice (maybe a quick visit to bulk food store), it's worth a shot.
Fill the pillowcase with some rice, and try to shake it out so it lays evenly on the keys, and then let it hopefully absorb the moisture.
It's worth a try considering it's a keyboard I'm assuming you love/would hate to lose.
Yeah thats a common (and very good) trick to dry phones. I have never done it with a mechanical keyboard as I am afraid a piece of rice will break off and wedge itself into a corner of a key or something.
When a friend spilled milk into his das keyboard, he submerged the entire keyboard into a tupperware container containing a few bottles of a certain acid that I am trying to recall. And then set it to dry in the fridge.
EDIT: Asked him what he did. This was his response.
Cleaner? As when I dismantled the entire thing to fix the uselessly sticky keys? 90% rubbing alcohol. Submerged the entire pcb in there for like 20 minutes, constantly pressing the culprit keys. Not a standard procedure or cleaner by any means.
This should remove any foreign matter that may have accompanied the water into your keyboard. I would not suggest doing this with a rubber membrane keyboard BTW. I don't know the effects of alcohol on rubber.
That keyboard is as good as new BTW. You can find bottles of rubbing alcohol pretty cheap, he used like 3, 1 dollar bottles.
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I would think if you held it far enough away (as to not melt it) that using a hair dryer would sufficiently dry it.
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if its just water let it dry and it should be ok.
if its anything else, especially something with sugars on it, your best bet is to use alcohol to clean it out, then let it dry.
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im having the same problem too. i spilled my coke into my keyboard. but what i did was pulled out all the keycap from my black widow and dry the inside and let it dry.
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Throw it in rice.. let the water get absorbed. You should be fine.. especially if it was just water and not Beer // soda.
I would def recommend making sure its completely dry though.
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One more vote to the unplug it ASAP and stop using it. Wait until it's dry.
I spilled a super small amount of water on my razer blackwidow (like 2 tablespoons maybe?), and thought nothing of it, so kept using it. Later, my keyboard would constantly ghost the tab key (which is about where I spilled the water). As you can imagine, a keyboard that thinks you're pressing and holding the tab key is NOT very useful...
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What I would do is take it completely apart, pulling every key out, and then wiping it dry and then using some moist-absorbing stuff(rice might work but it could get stuck in between something in a keyboard) and letting it dry for several hours.
You shouldn't keep using it as is even if it works, it's very likely some keys are going to function suboptimally... I'm not sure how easily the keyboard would rust but
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Just leave it out to dry and dont use it for 2 weeks. Its better than dismantling it when its wet or putting it in the fridge.
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I got milk in my keyboard, washed it out with water, and then let it dry, and now it works perfectly. Water is fine, just let it dry out first so you don't short anything!
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if you have a key remover tool, remove all the keys that got water on them, dry them thoroughly and then put them back in.
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i just spilled water on the lower left side of my keyboard (ctrl, windows, alt, shift keys) during a game of starcraft but i didnt think it was a big deal cause there wasnt much water so i shook it and wiped it up as best i could and finished the game ... but as i exited i noticed the windows key wasnt working and the ctrl key was being held down. was working fine in game so i dunno why its like this now i just unplugged it hopefully it still works after a few hours of drying. anyone ever have experience with this? (im using a brown filco)
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