• Reviews around use (4.16 of 5)

    Hosa D5S-6 CAIG DeoxIT 5% Spray Contact Cleaner, 5 oz.

    • Measured spray makes using it a breeze.
    • Best used in a garage or utility room away from valuable finished wood.
    • It ruined the screen of my phone and my phone has been having technical difficulties every since using this product
    • This worked better than any other tuner cleaner I have used
    • Best contact cleaner I've used!
    • If you need solvent free use D100Yes I have and will recommend this product.
    • If restoring old gear, get the best stuff for good use of your time and effort.
    • Best contact cleaner I have ever used
    • Best contact cleaner I've ever used
    • Look at the many positive reviews and what various uses that users have used this product for with great results
    • This is what technicians have been using for years because it works.
    • one of the best products I have ever used, works great on dirty potentiometers.
    • is that while it improves contact integrity and lowers contact resistance dramatically, it does not break down and cause leakage or flashover when used on high voltage systems.
    • I've rejuvenated a couple of pieces of older equipment using it.
    • The common contact cleaners use silicone, which is non-conductive and thus, leaves a small increased residual contact resistance.
    • What else is there to say except that I get great pleasure using this, watching several of my battery cable ends go from green to copper and seeing my electrical connections restored.
    • The best that I have used
    • Thus, deoxit is one of the few cleaners used in metrology or delicate instruments.
    • I am an advocate of Tun-O-Wash, and that spray is widely used professionally.
    • Best use by far is on old electronic equipment that has switches with multiple contacts that you just can't get to for cleaning
    • Further, until at least a solid half hour to 45 minutes went by, the tuner functioned wildly and sometimes would not budge at all in frequency read-out(s) or, worse, suddenly render a totally out of band frequency