And one step further: why not boil EIS in the oven? If vigorously boiled the steam would carry particles/ions of EIS into all the nooks and crannies of the oven . . .

On Monday, Sep 15, 2008, at 14:04 Asia/Tokyo, Jonathan B. Britten wrote:

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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