Actually, how about cleaning as best you can, 
blowing out everything with an air hose (outside), 
then cover over all holes, but leave one near the top of the machine, 
and inject ozone into it for 24 to 48 hours.

Dan

 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jonathan B. Britten [mailto:jbrit...@cc.nakamura-u.ac.jp] 
> Sent: Monday, September 15, 2008 12:04 AM
> To: silver-list@eskimo.com
> Subject: Re: CS>OT: cleaning microwave guts
> 
> Just curious, and not quibbling, but given that this group is devoted 
> to EIS, why not use that?   Might it not be less oxidative?
> 
> Taking things one step further:  mightn't sunlight do the job?    If 
> one can spray something onto the components, sunlight might 
> also reach 
> them.   I have read that 48 hours of sunlight on PET-bottled water 
> renders it fit to drink -- the poor man's last-ditch water 
> purification system.
> 
> 
> On Saturday, Sep 13, 2008, at 00:05 Asia/Tokyo, Norton, Steve wrote:
> 
> >  Kathryn,
> > You should consider Malcolms suggestion about using bleach. It is a 
> > great disinfectant and does dissipate leaving no residue. 
> It generally 
> > isn't used for electronics because it is an oxidant and can corrode 
> > metals but if you dry the microwave in a reasonable time it 
> should be 
> > no problem. One approach might be to:
> 
> 
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