cancel
Showing results forย 
Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 

How would you clean the inside of your converter?

wopachop
Explorer
Explorer
The cabinet that holds the converter was extremely dusty. I took a picture will try to find it. Its a toyhauler that has driven down washboard roads with the converter fan running. Got the think the inside of the converter is quiet dusty.

Would you guys blow compressed air inside? Leave it alone? Original plan was to take it out and remove the cover. That might turn into an unneeded headache.

Was about to blast it with compressed air with a shop vac running and then wondered if there is a risk of damaging anything? Maybe limit to 50psi?
17 REPLIES 17

bpounds
Nomad
Nomad
Just use compressed air. Turning pressure down is nonsense. Not putting the nozzle up close to components is commonsense. It's a lot of fun to use the compressed air stream to spin up the fan - don't do that! In fact, hold the fan so it won't turn when you blow it out. A finger or a pencil will hold it fine.

I've blown out computers that way, too many times to even begin to count.

Oh, if your compressor blows anything but clean air, you've got some other maintenance to do too.
2006 F250 Diesel
2011 Keystone Cougar 278RKSWE Fiver

RayJayco
Explorer
Explorer
Dry nitrogen. It is cheap to refill once you have the tank and set up...

Do not turn the "compressed air" can upside down as it is not really 'compressed air'... If you put a 6 pack in a box, turn the can upside down and spray it into the box, it will cool it in less than a minute... ๐Ÿ˜‰
Inquiring minds want to know...

wopachop
Explorer
Explorer
That's sounds familiar. Not the best brand eh?

time2roll
Nomad
Nomad

ScottG
Nomad
Nomad
Joe417 wrote:
Depends on how clean you want to get it and how dirty it is before you start.

Air will blow most of it out. A brush is usually required to loosen the stubborn dirt. But even a little cleaning will help if it's real dirty.

If compressed air damages anything then it was already a bad solder joint.

If you do use a brush you need to be reasonable but something like a paint brush should be soft enough.

I don't recommend it for most but you can wash circuit boards.

I washed one with water and soap a couple of years ago when cooking oil spilled in it.

You just have to dry it good before powering it back up. Depending on requirements, manufacturers routinely wash electronic assemblies especially on high reliability and many military products.


LOL, that brings back memories! I used to clean circuit boards from aviation electronics that had been submerged during floods or crashes. 409 makes gold contacts shine like jewelry!
FWIW, washing is fine but it's best not to soak things like transformers, inductors, potentiometers or anything that can absorb water.
Placing the board in an oven, pre-heated to around 130~150 degrees and then turned off as you put the board inside will dry everything out safely as it slowly cools down.

Joe417
Explorer
Explorer
Depends on how clean you want to get it and how dirty it is before you start.

Air will blow most of it out. A brush is usually required to loosen the stubborn dirt. But even a little cleaning will help if it's real dirty.

If compressed air damages anything then it was already a bad solder joint.

If you do use a brush you need to be reasonable but something like a paint brush should be soft enough.
Joe and Evelyn

SAR_Tracker
Explorer
Explorer
I used a compressor on mine several years ago to remove the dust, etc.... there were also aluminum leftovers from the construction of the trailer that hadn't been cleaned up. At least one of the little metal "half moons" got blown into the converter without my knowing it. As soon as power was applied, the magic smoke was let out of the converter, requiring a new unit. Probably a blessing in disguise, as the new converter is a much superior unit to the OEM unit. But still......
Rusty & Cheryl
2011 F250 2WD 6.2L Gasser
2008 Weekend Warrior FB2100
"Common sense is in spite of, not the result of, education" - Victor Hugo (1802-1885)

LadyRVer
Explorer II
Explorer II
I used a clean 2" paint brush.... I didn't know I was supposed to open the converter up and clean it out. I learned real fast when I had to replace the converter. Dog hair galore with dust.

GordonThree
Explorer
Explorer
Don't hit the fan with high pressure air, that's a good way to damage the bearing, or at least, force dust deeper in.
2013 KZ Sportsmen Classic 200, 20 ft TT
2020 RAM 1500, 5.7 4x4, 8 speed

Isaac-1
Explorer
Explorer
If you use an air compressor, you one with a pressure regulator with the pressure turned way down. Using a shop compressor at full pressure can put out enough force to break things.

ScottG
Nomad
Nomad
I'd use a compressor and blow the heck out of it. Nothing but dust is going to come loose with a shot of air.

pauldub
Explorer
Explorer
Air compressor for sure

2oldman
Explorer II
Explorer II
Depends on where all that dust goes when it's blown.
"If I'm wearing long pants, I'm too far north" - 2oldman

NMDriver2
Explorer
Explorer
Shop vac works for me, high volume low pressure, and I use it for other things besides. I took the cover off of mine. It was like 6-8 screws and no wiring attached.
Turret Class traveler