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I tried DA a bunch of times and it just seems to work faster. That slimy resin turns bone dry quick. In fact I just saw Menard's has a gallon of DA for $15. That is now cheaper than 4 quarts of 91% from Walmart. But there is nothing wrong with 91%.
I switched to DA a while back and noticed how much better it cleans resin right off the bat... Great for cleaning resin and it was available when IPA got scarce at the start of the Pandemic.Just keep in mind a few things... First, DA is much more flammable than IPA. If your basement workshop is in the same space as your furnace (as is mine), it's advisable that you clean your prints with DA somewhere else (especially if it's winter and the furnace cycles regularly). Second, it's quite a bit more toxic than IPA. Read up on it prior to using it and make the decision to switch (or not) once you've educated yourself on the health risks.While it is markedly better at cleaning prints of excess resin, I switched back to IPA now that it's available again. I'm not overly paranoid about using chemicals (I use Acetone pretty regularly), I wanted to limit exposure to DA based on what I'd read about it. JB
Just keep in mind a few things... First, DA is much more flammable than IPA. If your basement workshop is in the same space as your furnace (as is mine), it's advisable that you clean your prints with DA somewhere else (especially if it's winter and the furnace cycles regularly). Second, it's quite a bit more toxic than IPA. Read up on it prior to using it and make the decision to switch (or not) once you've educated yourself on the health risks.
As I see it, maybe when compared to 91% IPA, since DA is 99% (close enough to 100%) strength, but I would think that a 99% IPA (which I use in my hobbies) is likely as flammable as (99%) DA. Actually it is not the liquid alcohol that burns -- it is the vapors. I would suspect that 91% IPA produces slightly less vapors than 99% DA. Is there some specific source you can point me to which confirms this? Not that I'm calling your statement invalid -- I would just like to learn a bit more about this.
I confess that I'm not sure what the issue is with Joe's print. Is the light powder on the flat spalling off the printed part?In any event, my cleaning regimen involves no scrubbing, as my parts tend to be small and intricate:* 1 swish in old IPA - I just take the entire build plate and swish it around, by hand, in the vat for ~20-30 seconds.* Repeat in a 2nd vat of clean(er) IPA.* Release the parts from the build plate and swish each in acetone for 5-10 seconds, then blow with compressed air.The parts are squeaky clean after that. I do all of this in a spare room that also contains my airbrush hood, so I run that as a vent during the process. Acetone is not friendly to all flavours of resin, but it works great, and very quickly, for the basic resins. YMMV.
Is Coleman camp fuel good for any of this? Just because sometimes it is cheaper.
That's a good question Pete and the answer is never make assumptions! Looked up the MSDS sheets for both DA and 99% IPA. Exposure, risk, toxicity and flash point are about the same between the two. DA has a slightly lower (1°F) flash point than IPA. Not much of a difference.So guys... A. Never assume. B. Neither solvent seems to be more toxic than the other.Jeff