I'm not trying to be antagonistic, but unless you plan to perform this procedure on all production devices - neither should you do so to the test sample(s).
My 2 cents worth. Regards, Stephen At 02:43 PM 2/28/2002, you wrote:
All, I'm preparing for an emissions test and I had started cleaning some of my chassis mating surfaces with a pen/pencil eraser then alcohol to ensure the surface to surface contact was good. A friend then told me that using an eraser would also remove the anti-corrosive coating that was on the metal (Thanks Paul!). So I would end up with a very short term benefit, then rust. What I am trying to determine is if maybe light rubbing with a pencil eraser might only remove surface contaminants and leave the metal and coatings intact. (the pencil eraser is much less abrasive than the pen side) So the real question is... Does anyone have direct good or bad experience with the aftereffects of using a pencil eraser to clean mating edges (card faceplates in a telco box for example)? I have both steel and aluminum surfaces to worry about so info for either type is welcome. (and don't worry the different metal types are not adjacent). Any feedback would be greatly appreciated as the system is really dirty right now.

