Many lube and cleaner recipes have rubbing alcohol in them.
Unfortunately people are panicking in the US and stores do not have rubbing alcohol in them.
Where I live, I can't even buy liqueur as vodka or Everclear could fill in.
What I can buy is Denatured Alcohol, at the hardware store. It is used for shellac and some other finishes.
But the question remains:
Can Denatured Alcohol be used in place of Rubbing Alcohol in patch lubes or bore cleaners?
Isopropanol (Rubbing Alcohol) and ethanol (Denatured and normal drinking Alcohol) are not the same. They are different chemicals, CH3CHOHCH3 and C2H5OH respectively. Question is, will they work the same for our purposes?
My biggest concern is the additives in Denatured Alcohol. I do know that because of these additives, and notably the residues they leave behind, that Denatured Alcohol is not good for cleaning electrical components. Still, maybe it doesn't matter for patch lube.
Thoughts?
Experiences?
Does everyone have toilet paper?
Unfortunately people are panicking in the US and stores do not have rubbing alcohol in them.
Where I live, I can't even buy liqueur as vodka or Everclear could fill in.
What I can buy is Denatured Alcohol, at the hardware store. It is used for shellac and some other finishes.
But the question remains:
Can Denatured Alcohol be used in place of Rubbing Alcohol in patch lubes or bore cleaners?
Isopropanol (Rubbing Alcohol) and ethanol (Denatured and normal drinking Alcohol) are not the same. They are different chemicals, CH3CHOHCH3 and C2H5OH respectively. Question is, will they work the same for our purposes?
My biggest concern is the additives in Denatured Alcohol. I do know that because of these additives, and notably the residues they leave behind, that Denatured Alcohol is not good for cleaning electrical components. Still, maybe it doesn't matter for patch lube.
Thoughts?
Experiences?
Does everyone have toilet paper?