@@jimlahey8919 Isopropyl isn't clean enough, what's better is a food grade alcohol like Everclear, which is even more versatile than isopropyl. The same goes for making extracts. Don't use anything but food grade. The cutting edge is using super-critical CO2 which evaporates without flammable fumes.
If you buy the 70% stuff and want to concentrate it further you can mix the rubbing alcohol with some table salt and shake it a bit. Salt is much more soluble in water than isopropyl alcohol and the alcohol and water layers will actually separate leaving a salt water solution and a high purity alcohol solution.
Pro tip. Use a small push pin to make one hole in the aluminum seal. This will cut down on *waste straight from the bottle. Like a squeeze bottle with a thin stream
A handful of other good uses: -Removes adhesive left behind by stickers -Remove oils/grease from objects -If you have ever cleaned your car windows and found a bunch a streaks after. Wipe the window down first with alcohol and then wash with window cleaner. The Alcohol removes the oils/dirt on the car windows.
Adding to this list: - removes permanent marker - great degreaser - removes sticker/glue residue - good carb/parts cleaner - helps relieve itching I always have a bottle or two in the shop. Very useful when you need it!
FYI: If you cannot find isopropyl alcohol then check your local liquor store for Everclear which is 95% pure grain alcohol and works just as well in most cases. I use it for making my own cologne and body sprays with essential oils. We also make our own bathroom spray using 90% or better alcohol and cinnamon essential oil (doTerra Cassia.)
Going on the windshield deicing idea, I’ve added a small amount of isopropyl directly into my wiper fluid reservoir to help prevent the fluid from freezing once it is sprayed on the windshield when it’s extremely cold. I’ve had great luck with it instantly melting ice/snow on the windshield.
4 ปีที่แล้ว +4
I was so glad I had a bottle of 90% in March when the alcohol and hand sanitiser disappeared overnight. I mixed it with glycerin to make my own hand sanitiser. Also made another with aloe vera gel which I preferred. Got us through when you couldn't get the stuff anywhere.
I have helped at the mortuary a lot. You encounter tons of bad germs there. I sprayed my hands and equipment frequently. A mist from a spray bottle really stretches the alcohol supply. It is also good for door knobs and other public-use items. Anyway spray it on your hands and rub it in. Remember your finger tips and clean your nails then treat under them.
You mentioned it as a stand alone for nausea but it also enhances the effectiveness of anti-nausea prescription drugs and is safe to use at the same time so if your Zofran or Meclazine isn't quite good enough you can add sniffing an alcohol wipe or a few drops on a cotton ball with no adverse affects.
When opening the foil on the alcohol, just poke a small hole in the foil so it comes out in a more controllable amounts, and it also helps keep the alcohol from evaporating as fast, so the bottle last longer.
Retired anesthesiologist here. We always tried having a nauseated postoperative patient sniff some isopropyl alcohol sponges. I don’t know about 50% success, but certainly it worked a third of the time.
You can also mix it in with your washer fluid in your car so you can hit it in the morning to deice your windshield. During the winter I use only water and alcohol in my washer bottle. It actually works pretty good cleaning the windshield too!
I've been running a still and making moonshine for years. Trust me when I say that being able to make alcohol is going to be one of the best things you can do in any post-apocalyptic situation. So many uses. Plus it can be Bartered with
just a quick note as chemist. Dont dilute your 70% IPA for desinfection purposes, you might want to dilute 90% solution to get around 70-80% as thats more optimal concentration. Too concentrated or to diluted solutions dont work optimaly.
Alcohol combines with any liquid, petroleum, non-petroleum, organic greases and oils and can be used as a dilution and/or carrier for other products. Combined 12:1 with pure lanolin, it makes a great cartridge case lube for resizing rifle and pistol cases prior to reloading. Just put into a spray bottle and lightly spray the cases on a cookie sheet before running them through the resizing die.
If you know you just got into poison oak, rinse affected skin and wipe off with clean towel. It removes the oils from your outer layer of skin taking the poison oak oils with it
A tip for for the ice pack. Soak up the solution with a sponge before you put it in a plastic bag and freeze it. It won’t leak as much if the bag gets punctured.
To make a 16 oz. ice pack, use a 50:1 solution of water and sodium polyacrylate in a zip bag. To lower the freeze point, add 1 tablespoon or less of glycerin.
Something to note, 70% is a better disinfectant than 90%. It sounds contradictory but the additional water content does something that allows the alcohol to be more effective against bacteria, something about assisting it penetrate the cell better. Water down 90% if you want to disinfect something.
My wife when pregnant lived with a bottle of alcohol to smell. She was on 2 different antiemetics and the alcohol helped her with the vomiting on her real bad days
Dont know if you will see this but I really hope you do! I'm an automotive detailer and it is very good at taking off tree sap without scratching paint, apply it on a microfiber and rub the sap away, I use 90 for a quicker use but I'm sure either will work! Will definitely be a good tip in your living environment!
#17 - Deodorant (not antiperspirant). Most deodorants used to be alcohol in some kind of carrier. We have used it in the summer because most deodorants, and antiperspirants, have some kind of fragrance added, and most artificial fragrances attract insects. I also know someone who has skin reaction to to fragrances, and he uses it. It doesn't last all day, but most deodorants don't either.
That’s just scratching the surface. There are so many uses, it’s amazing. It’s great for cleaning the exterior car windows as well since it won’t streak and breaks down the road grime. Also works great for cleaning a greasy stove top. It breaks the grease down immediately and again, won’t streak. I put some on a Q-tip and clean my belly button with it after I shower. Keeps it from ever getting smelly. So many uses. Generally, you want the 70%. The oxygen from the water reacts with the alcohol to help kill germs better. I can’t remember the exact chemistry behind it though. My friend, God bless you and yours and stay safe!
We used to use alcohol also with tick removal But I found out that ticks will empty their stomach when they are encountered by alcohol before releasing themselves. This you really do not want. Better to just grab them and yank them out ASAP without the use of alcohol
Using rubbing alcohol on the skin can be dangerous, especially for children. It's toxic and can be absorbed through the skin, as well as inhaled.accidental isopropyl alcohol poisoning is common and the majority of cases are in children under 6 years old
@@sweetlifefarm1982 Wondering if he's referring to Vertigo, which is different. I often feel 'spewy', just by the smell of things. Then again, I'm always crook (sick).
@@sweetlifefarm1982 I want to see that too, lol. Cody and fam seem to lack nothing. Not that I'm jealous, just always interested in what happens in the US and see him as a bit of a beacon of how good his country is, even if it's defending himself and his country.
As a truck driver, alcohol is very useful during winter. Trucks use compressed air for braking and in the compressed air is moisture, moisture freezes therfore air lines and brakes will freeze up and be inoperable. I pour just a cap full into the air lines and it will melt the moisture in the lines freeing up the brakes! Works 👍
Lots more expensive, but that's what I carry in my backpacking gear. All of the above uses, and it's not toxic to drink. So if absolutely necessary you can use it for an anesthetic as well.
Everclear, and the other kinds of alcohol we drink is ethyl alcohol, not isopropyl. But that's a distinction I won't be stressing when the ATF finds my still
I learned something new. I always thought they called it rubbing alcohol because they would rub it on your skin before an injection, to clean the area. I didn't know about the sore muscle therapeutic aspect. 👍
Be careful when using alcohol to get water out of your ear. My cousin thought he had water in his ear and poured in some alcohol. Turns out his eardrum was perforated. He described the pain as one of the worst he’s ever encountered.
I healed a torn rotator cuff using alcohol ice pack (mentioned in video) and a heating pad, cycling back and forth between them 15 to 30 minutes at a time. Took a week or so, but also helped with the pain.
My mom smells rubbing alcohol like its going out of style. Has been for years. Helps her with her allergies, and calms her nerves. She swears by it, and I have to admit it does help me calm down when I need it, and clear up my nose. Isopropyl is king!
Literally the best part of this stuff is the removal of pine pitch from vehicles! Takes it right off and saves your paint. Also great for cleaning electronics.
Kerosene works wonders, and if your feeling adventurous, Mark Novak, who has an excellent gunsmithing channel here on you tube simply boils stuff out using plain water - it has the added advantage of converting red rust to blue, just follow up with a carding wheel. He uses a bunch of deep fryers filled with water for small parts.
#17 For decades I've used Isopropanol to clean flux off solder joints. #18 Also to refill the little spray bottle for cleaning spectacles. And mixing it with 2/3 water to spray on your windshield to remove ice. Likewise put 1/3 in your screenwash reservoir in winter. (Tip, use deionised water, not tap water.)
Never have used it as a preventive for window ice ups. But I have used it for years to remove ice/frost instead of an ice/scrapper. Works great. I’m assuming due to the speed that running alcohol evaporates you would have to apply it often.
I use it often for cleaning electronics! It works really well as a contact cleaner. I once repaired a water logged cb radio in a snowstorm at 2 am using the rubbing alcohol from the medical kit. That radio even still works.
I use it in the shop as a cheap degreaser and it evaporites quickly. If you are going to to need something clean, do your final clean up with alcohol. When you're done your ready to paint, solder, weld or stick any adhesive to it because its squeaky clean.
Great video and thank you, I wanted to add what I use it for mostly and that's for cleaning and drying electronics. Make sure it's unplugged or the battery is out AND the capacitors are discharged BEFORE cleaning electronics. It works great to clean charging ports with a toothpick soaked in isopropyl. Just make sure it's all dry before you plug in. Ps if you have a disk player that won't read a disc,or that skips and stops when played with like like a DVD player or game console use a DRY Q-tip and gently clean the lens (small clear glass that reads the disc) it works every time but make sure it's a dry Q-tip.
I've used Iso for stain removal too. It will remove ink or anything you'd clean with a solvent but safe for your clothes. Ditto Peroxide for blood, it works wonders on getting out blood stains. You can also remove sharpie from hard surfaces, like kitchen countertops when the kids get into the sharpies. I use it at times to clean my pocket knife, especially if I've opened a lot of boxes (tape goo) and it works great, also makes it sterile so if you use your knife to prep or open up food. I know I can just use soap or a degreaser but it's safe for my clothes and a lot faster than soap/water and I don't have to worry about water down in the knife innards.
Unless you have the superior silicone wiper blades. Silicone isn't affected by IPA and it also puts a micro-thin layer over your windshield so that after using them enough simply driving at a high enough speed the water of rain and snow and ice rush off the glass as they cannot easily hold to the glass any longer. I love my PIAA wipers! Had them for 8 years and still working perfectly (because silicone doesn't dry out like rubber does). Imagine receiving at least 8 years from your wiper blades... It makes life so much easier!
I mix 2 parts 70% rubbing alcohol with 1 part 3% hydrogen peroxide as a topical antiseptic. Seems to reach under the skin to clear up pimples. Also cleans eyeglasses.
Rubbing alcohol has so many uses. I use it to get tree sap off my hands and glue adhesive from things that I don't want to use petroleum solvents on, it's much more mild. I've also used it to relieve itchy skin, sometimes follow up with a lotion or balm.
Excellent video!! Lots of good new to me facts. You can also get water out of your ear with a very small volume of warm cooking oil if you don't have rubbing alcohol.
I've watched enough cowboy movies to know that Whiskey is always used when removing legs or bullets to disinfect the wound,,, and the patient can also bite down on the cork! And at a pinch you can even re-hydrate and drink the stuff!
I learned the many uses of isopropyl alcohol while I was working in the optical coating industry. It is terrific cleaner for eyeglasses. It is safe to use on polycarbonate lenses without frosting. It also cuts grease better than most commercial lenses. It will also remove adhesive residue that is used to affix labels.
Also removes latex paint from hands, hair, etc. almost as well as denatured alcohol at a fraction of the price. The 90% burns better in alcohol stoves, but it is not the best choice: it leaves sooty residue. The yellow bottle of heet is the easiest cheap stove fuel.
Do not use straight alcohol to clean an open wound. Besides hurting like a mofo, it will irritate and inflame the flayed tissue which will delay healing. Otherwise, learned some new stuff about it, good to know.
Be careful with the alcohol on your windshield because your windshield seals are made of rubber and alcohol tends to dry out the rubber and will eventually make your windshield leak or come loose
Yeah, 97% alcohol is perfect for electronics, because it doesn’t damage it like water does. Back when iPhone had an actual home button, whenever the button became sticky, we would pour alcohol over the button and press it a few times to get the alcohol in there, then leave it to dry for a few minutes, then the button would work like normal again😄
You can especially use 70% to cook with in the stoves as you mentioned with proper ventilation...90% tends to soot up the pots worse but with the addition of extra water, one can cut that soot down to ZERO with proper pot placement. Sad that this stuff was EVERYWHERE with dust collecting on the containers, and now...It's like gold.
Cody, It is also great at killing fleas you may see on your pets and in your home without staining. Just put a spray nozzle in the bottle and spray as needed.
I wouldn't use alcohol on a car regularly. it strips protective chemicals off that can cause metals to corrode. also alcohol evaporates if it helps keep the ice clear its probably just because your cleaning your window.
It's great for cleaning metal, as a degreaser. It's a must have for a bike mechanic. Aside from that, it kills germs, so thats why its used for medics. If your a person who uses this at their job, people are being full on price gouged for it online. I only found it at walmart one time, and there were only 3 bottles, so stocking up was not an option. I like to put sponges through the dishwasher or even the laundry. Boiling water is also good, and vinegar for sanitizing kitchen stuff.That is so neat about the tick removal.
Best not to use for tick removal. It makes the ticks regurgitate and that can more readily spread disease (babosis, limes, RMSF). Tick lasso is the best thing i have found to get all sizes of ticks off dogs
Same here. Fortunately I had literally just stocked up on rubbing alcohol, because I use it for everything, so I just shook my head while everyone went crazy😅
I bought two 18 liter cans of 98.6% Ethanol just as all this stuff hit, I use it for making shellac but it also works for making hand sanitizer, and for alcohol stoves, etc. It's very useful to have around. Cheers from Tokyo! Stu
At the VOA transmitter plant the alcohol is used to clean HV insulators in the transmitters. Also vacuum tube envelopes,vacuum capacitor envelopes. Cleaning parts before silver soldering or conventional soldering. Here they buy it in cases of 1 gal cans.
12 minute video posted 6 minutes ago and already has a downvote. Some people just have nothing better to do now don't they? Thanks for what I'm sure is a video I will enjoy Cody.
I used isopropyl alcohol for cleaning tape recorder heads and the tape path the machine. Also for cassette recorders and tape cartridge machines. At the VOA studios they bought the alcohol in 5 gallon cans-all of us in the maintenance shop there had small bottles we filled and kept in toolboxes or field recording job kits. Now with digital-the use of alcohol has largely disappeared. Sad! Loved using the stuff as a “head” cleaner.
Soon as we started getting hints of Covid out of China, I bought gallons of this stuff. Easy peasy no big deal at the time. Haven't regretted it at all.
You Can Still Get Isopropyl Alcohol Here + + + FREE SHIPPING + + + amzn.to/3nj6p97 (amazon affiliate link)
And Fred Meyer,and Wal Mart as well 70% Isopropyl strength.
It’s used in making hash oil.... probably why it’s hard to find.
@@jimlahey8919 Isopropyl isn't clean enough, what's better is a food grade alcohol like Everclear, which is even more versatile than isopropyl.
The same goes for making extracts. Don't use anything but food grade.
The cutting edge is using super-critical CO2 which evaporates without flammable fumes.
@@janinewellman1814 you can fine 91% at wally world too.
@@jimlahey8919 Isopropyl alcohol is a purer form of denatured alcohol aka wood alcohol that you cannot drink.
I did a lot of research with the flammable capabilities when I was a kid.
Don’t we all
Ah I know that only we were 17 and almost burnt down our class
@OBAMFSpike I remember that method.
Potato acceleration tube
If you buy the 70% stuff and want to concentrate it further you can mix the rubbing alcohol with some table salt and shake it a bit. Salt is much more soluble in water than isopropyl alcohol and the alcohol and water layers will actually separate leaving a salt water solution and a high purity alcohol solution.
Pro tip. Use a small push pin to make one hole in the aluminum seal. This will cut down on *waste straight from the bottle. Like a squeeze bottle with a thin stream
Excellent idea. 👍
It will reduce waste, too
Waste * lol
@@luke-te3sr we knew what you meant.
@OBAMFSpike we are all human. I made the mistake of inviting a robot to translate my voice into text
A handful of other good uses:
-Removes adhesive left behind by stickers
-Remove oils/grease from objects
-If you have ever cleaned your car windows and found a bunch a streaks after. Wipe the window down first with alcohol and then wash with window cleaner. The Alcohol removes the oils/dirt on the car windows.
Gets marker off whiteboards too
Its a great solvent after all.
It’s also Good for cleaning motherboards
Removes Sap from my windshield🥰
Adding to this list:
- removes permanent marker
- great degreaser
- removes sticker/glue residue
- good carb/parts cleaner
- helps relieve itching
I always have a bottle or two in the shop. Very useful when you need it!
FYI: If you cannot find isopropyl alcohol then check your local liquor store for Everclear which is 95% pure grain alcohol and works just as well in most cases. I use it for making my own cologne and body sprays with essential oils. We also make our own bathroom spray using 90% or better alcohol and cinnamon essential oil (doTerra Cassia.)
Going on the windshield deicing idea, I’ve added a small amount of isopropyl directly into my wiper fluid reservoir to help prevent the fluid from freezing once it is sprayed on the windshield when it’s extremely cold. I’ve had great luck with it instantly melting ice/snow on the windshield.
I was so glad I had a bottle of 90% in March when the alcohol and hand sanitiser disappeared overnight. I mixed it with glycerin to make my own hand sanitiser. Also made another with aloe vera gel which I preferred. Got us through when you couldn't get the stuff anywhere.
I have helped at the mortuary a lot. You encounter tons of bad germs there. I sprayed my hands and equipment frequently.
A mist from a spray bottle really stretches the alcohol supply.
It is also good for door knobs and other public-use items.
Anyway spray it on your hands and rub it in. Remember your finger tips and clean your nails then treat under them.
You mentioned it as a stand alone for nausea but it also enhances the effectiveness of anti-nausea prescription drugs and is safe to use at the same time so if your Zofran or Meclazine isn't quite good enough you can add sniffing an alcohol wipe or a few drops on a cotton ball with no adverse affects.
When opening the foil on the alcohol, just poke a small hole in the foil so it comes out in a more controllable amounts, and it also helps keep the alcohol from evaporating as fast, so the bottle last longer.
Retired anesthesiologist here. We always tried having a nauseated postoperative patient sniff some isopropyl alcohol sponges. I don’t know about 50% success, but certainly it worked a third of the time.
You can also mix it in with your washer fluid in your car so you can hit it in the morning to deice your windshield. During the winter I use only water and alcohol in my washer bottle. It actually works pretty good cleaning the windshield too!
I've been running a still and making moonshine for years. Trust me when I say that being able to make alcohol is going to be one of the best things you can do in any post-apocalyptic situation. So many uses. Plus it can be Bartered with
just a quick note as chemist. Dont dilute your 70% IPA for desinfection purposes, you might want to dilute 90% solution to get around 70-80% as thats more optimal concentration. Too concentrated or to diluted solutions dont work optimaly.
I've also used rubbing alcohol for a ringworm infection, just wet the area with it a couple times a day for like 3 days
Alcohol combines with any liquid, petroleum, non-petroleum, organic greases and oils and can be used as a dilution and/or carrier for other products. Combined 12:1 with pure lanolin, it makes a great cartridge case lube for resizing rifle and pistol cases prior to reloading. Just put into a spray bottle and lightly spray the cases on a cookie sheet before running them through the resizing die.
My #1 use for it is for surface prep. It’s a great cleaner before glue, paint, or double sided tape.
Works great as a padlock deicer. I keep a bottle in the truck for whenever I need to unlock a frozen padlock in the winter.
I’ve used it to prevent my windshield washer fluid sprayers from freezing - it works pretty well!
IPA is also great for removing ink stains from clothing and Sharpie pen ink. Great info, Thanks and God Bless!
If you know you just got into poison oak, rinse affected skin and wipe off with clean towel. It removes the oils from your outer layer of skin taking the poison oak oils with it
Reminds me: Nothing sticks to oil. I've used olive oil to remove pine pitch from hair. Also helps remove label glue from products.
A tip for for the ice pack. Soak up the solution with a sponge before you put it in a plastic bag and freeze it. It won’t leak as much if the bag gets punctured.
To make a 16 oz. ice pack, use a 50:1 solution of water and sodium polyacrylate in a zip bag. To lower the freeze point, add 1 tablespoon or less of glycerin.
the sodium polyacrylate makes the gel
Single best use of this is sap removal from clothes and hands! It's magic!
Also GO JO for sap remover, cloths and hands .
Also good for removing sticky labels, cleaning glasses and general degreasing.
Alcohol is useful for just about anything in a pinch.
It also can be watered down and used to loosen the leather when stretching and breaking in boots
Something to note, 70% is a better disinfectant than 90%. It sounds contradictory but the additional water content does something that allows the alcohol to be more effective against bacteria, something about assisting it penetrate the cell better. Water down 90% if you want to disinfect something.
My wife when pregnant lived with a bottle of alcohol to smell. She was on 2 different antiemetics and the alcohol helped her with the vomiting on her real bad days
Dont know if you will see this but I really hope you do! I'm an automotive detailer and it is very good at taking off tree sap without scratching paint, apply it on a microfiber and rub the sap away, I use 90 for a quicker use but I'm sure either will work! Will definitely be a good tip in your living environment!
#17 - Deodorant (not antiperspirant). Most deodorants used to be alcohol in some kind of carrier. We have used it in the summer because most deodorants, and antiperspirants, have some kind of fragrance added, and most artificial fragrances attract insects. I also know someone who has skin reaction to to fragrances, and he uses it. It doesn't last all day, but most deodorants don't either.
That’s just scratching the surface. There are so many uses, it’s amazing. It’s great for cleaning the exterior car windows as well since it won’t streak and breaks down the road grime. Also works great for cleaning a greasy stove top. It breaks the grease down immediately and again, won’t streak. I put some on a Q-tip and clean my belly button with it after I shower. Keeps it from ever getting smelly. So many uses. Generally, you want the 70%. The oxygen from the water reacts with the alcohol to help kill germs better. I can’t remember the exact chemistry behind it though. My friend, God bless you and yours and stay safe!
I use it and table salt for cleaning my glass bong out weekly it works like a charm every time:)))
Haha hell yea.
Most excellent!
We used to use alcohol also with tick removal
But I found out that ticks will empty their stomach when they are encountered by alcohol before releasing themselves. This you really do not want. Better to just grab them and yank them out ASAP without the use of alcohol
Using rubbing alcohol on the skin can be dangerous, especially for children. It's toxic and can be absorbed through the skin, as well as inhaled.accidental isopropyl alcohol poisoning is common and the majority of cases are in children under 6 years old
Anyone else have trouble focusing on Cody when he has such a perfectly organized background?🤣
LOL... I noticed... the guy is definitely OCD! Wish I was that organized.
Ocd wall...love it🤣
Wranglerstar 2020: “I’ve never had nausea”
Time stamp?
10:40
Do people just get nausea? I've only ever had it once when I had stitches removed.
@@sweetlifefarm1982 Wondering if he's referring to Vertigo, which is different. I often feel 'spewy', just by the smell of things. Then again, I'm always crook (sick).
@@sweetlifefarm1982 I want to see that too, lol. Cody and fam seem to lack nothing. Not that I'm jealous, just always interested in what happens in the US and see him as a bit of a beacon of how good his country is, even if it's defending himself and his country.
As a truck driver, alcohol is very useful during winter. Trucks use compressed air for braking and in the compressed air is moisture, moisture freezes therfore air lines and brakes will freeze up and be inoperable. I pour just a cap full into the air lines and it will melt the moisture in the lines freeing up the brakes! Works 👍
Everclear, 17 amazing facts.
Lots more expensive, but that's what I carry in my backpacking gear. All of the above uses, and it's not toxic to drink. So if absolutely necessary you can use it for an anesthetic as well.
I should have read the comments before I suggested Vodka for 17 uses
Everclear, and the other kinds of alcohol we drink is ethyl alcohol, not isopropyl. But that's a distinction I won't be stressing when the ATF finds my still
I learned something new. I always thought they called it rubbing alcohol because they would rub it on your skin before an injection, to clean the area. I didn't know about the sore muscle therapeutic aspect. 👍
Be careful when using alcohol to get water out of your ear. My cousin thought he had water in his ear and poured in some alcohol. Turns out his eardrum was perforated. He described the pain as one of the worst he’s ever encountered.
I healed a torn rotator cuff using alcohol ice pack (mentioned in video) and a heating pad, cycling back and forth between them 15 to 30 minutes at a time. Took a week or so, but also helped with the pain.
If you can’t find rubbing alcohol you can always go to your liquor store and buy Everclear. You can do all of the above with it and drink it.
Any strong liquor that doesn’t contain sugar should do, but 97% alcohol is preferred.
Note to self, decide to drink or treat before drinking it
Lol ever clear is only about 15 times the cost of isopropyl.
Or you could just make your own.
For sanitizing usage, you must have at least 65% alcohol. That would be 130 proof. Anything less than that cannot be relied upon for disinfection.
My mom smells rubbing alcohol like its going out of style. Has been for years. Helps her with her allergies, and calms her nerves. She swears by it, and I have to admit it does help me calm down when I need it, and clear up my nose. Isopropyl is king!
Learned when I was a kid to use clear ammonia on bee stings. Makes the sting go away almost instantly.
Does anybody use mud for bee stings? A trick my dad taught me. As the mud dries it pulls the venom with it
Literally the best part of this stuff is the removal of pine pitch from vehicles! Takes it right off and saves your paint. Also great for cleaning electronics.
Degreasing and cleaning gun parts
Kerosene works wonders, and if your feeling adventurous, Mark Novak, who has an excellent gunsmithing channel here on you tube simply boils stuff out using plain water - it has the added advantage of converting red rust to blue, just follow up with a carding wheel. He uses a bunch of deep fryers filled with water for small parts.
What i use to clean my reloading dies
dexman9908 me too!
#17 For decades I've used Isopropanol to clean flux off solder joints.
#18 Also to refill the little spray bottle for cleaning spectacles.
And mixing it with 2/3 water to spray on your windshield to remove ice.
Likewise put 1/3 in your screenwash reservoir in winter. (Tip, use deionised water, not tap water.)
I'll bet Jack is thrilled about the entire world knowing about his toe nail fungus
@HH AA Do you know what a fungal infection is? Most toenail infections tend to involve fungus of some sort.
We have a fungus among us .
Never have used it as a preventive for window ice ups. But I have used it for years to remove ice/frost instead of an ice/scrapper. Works great. I’m assuming due to the speed that running alcohol evaporates you would have to apply it often.
I poke a tiny hole with a needle in the tinfoil seal. Perfect size for most uses and really meters usage.
But I guess a sharpie works too lol!
I use it often for cleaning electronics! It works really well as a contact cleaner. I once repaired a water logged cb radio in a snowstorm at 2 am using the rubbing alcohol from the medical kit. That radio even still works.
I can't wait to see you use your snow bike!
I use it in the shop as a cheap degreaser and it evaporites quickly. If you are going to to need something clean, do your final clean up with alcohol. When you're done your ready to paint, solder, weld or stick any adhesive to it because its squeaky clean.
Keep up all your hard work my friend .
Great information Sir !!! Thanks and Blessings to you and your family !!
Note: Before irrigating a wound Remove pants and under-ware
Great video and thank you, I wanted to add what I use it for mostly and that's for cleaning and drying electronics. Make sure it's unplugged or the battery is out AND the capacitors are discharged BEFORE cleaning electronics. It works great to clean charging ports with a toothpick soaked in isopropyl. Just make sure it's all dry before you plug in. Ps if you have a disk player that won't read a disc,or that skips and stops when played with like like a DVD player or game console use a DRY Q-tip and gently clean the lens (small clear glass that reads the disc) it works every time but make sure it's a dry Q-tip.
"If it hurts it's good" - last time I smashed my thumb with a hammer I didn't think it was good.
I've used Iso for stain removal too. It will remove ink or anything you'd clean with a solvent but safe for your clothes. Ditto Peroxide for blood, it works wonders on getting out blood stains. You can also remove sharpie from hard surfaces, like kitchen countertops when the kids get into the sharpies. I use it at times to clean my pocket knife, especially if I've opened a lot of boxes (tape goo) and it works great, also makes it sterile so if you use your knife to prep or open up food. I know I can just use soap or a degreaser but it's safe for my clothes and a lot faster than soap/water and I don't have to worry about water down in the knife innards.
#12: correct but don’t use your wipers when the fluid has softened the ice on your windshield. The will rubber wear out in a minute
Alcohol breaks down the rubber
Unless you have the superior silicone wiper blades. Silicone isn't affected by IPA and it also puts a micro-thin layer over your windshield so that after using them enough simply driving at a high enough speed the water of rain and snow and ice rush off the glass as they cannot easily hold to the glass any longer. I love my PIAA wipers! Had them for 8 years and still working perfectly (because silicone doesn't dry out like rubber does). Imagine receiving at least 8 years from your wiper blades... It makes life so much easier!
I mix 2 parts 70% rubbing alcohol with 1 part 3% hydrogen peroxide as a topical antiseptic. Seems to reach under the skin to clear up pimples.
Also cleans eyeglasses.
Pro tip: use 70% rather than 90% for disinfecting purposes it's far more effective
How when it has 20% more alchohole only it can be worst for skin
Rubbing alcohol has so many uses. I use it to get tree sap off my hands and glue adhesive from things that I don't want to use petroleum solvents on, it's much more mild. I've also used it to relieve itchy skin, sometimes follow up with a lotion or balm.
Works really well on pine pitch and taking the glue off from all those hateful stickers they put on everything
Excellent video!! Lots of good new to me facts. You can also get water out of your ear with a very small volume of warm cooking oil if you don't have rubbing alcohol.
I've watched enough cowboy movies to know that Whiskey is always used when removing legs or bullets to disinfect the wound,,, and the patient can also bite down on the cork! And at a pinch you can even re-hydrate and drink the stuff!
I learned the many uses of isopropyl alcohol while I was working in the optical coating industry. It is terrific cleaner for eyeglasses. It is safe to use on polycarbonate lenses without frosting. It also cuts grease better than most commercial lenses. It will also remove adhesive residue that is used to affix labels.
I've used it as an emergency substitute for gasoline. It saved me from having to walk 5 miles several years ago.
Also removes latex paint from hands, hair, etc. almost as well as denatured alcohol at a fraction of the price.
The 90% burns better in alcohol stoves, but it is not the best choice: it leaves sooty residue. The yellow bottle of heet is the easiest cheap stove fuel.
Do not use straight alcohol to clean an open wound. Besides hurting like a mofo, it will irritate and inflame the flayed tissue which will delay healing. Otherwise, learned some new stuff about it, good to know.
Be careful with the alcohol on your windshield because your windshield seals are made of rubber and alcohol tends to dry out the rubber and will eventually make your windshield leak or come loose
i use it to clean my electronics like my airpods and it doesn’t affect or damage them.
Yep you can use it to clean electronics. I use it all the time to clean mother boards and electrical contacts.
Yeah, 97% alcohol is perfect for electronics, because it doesn’t damage it like water does.
Back when iPhone had an actual home button, whenever the button became sticky, we would pour alcohol over the button and press it a few times to get the alcohol in there, then leave it to dry for a few minutes, then the button would work like normal again😄
Isopropyl is used to remove flux from circuit boards after you have done soldering.
We use it when building electronic boards all the time. Totally safe!
We use it to clean the avionics in aircraft
I also use it to remove pitch from my hands and other surfaces. Works great!
Don’t drink it
Too late
You can especially use 70% to cook with in the stoves as you mentioned with proper ventilation...90% tends to soot up the pots worse but with the addition of extra water, one can cut that soot down to ZERO with proper pot placement. Sad that this stuff was EVERYWHERE with dust collecting on the containers, and now...It's like gold.
FYI, this 16 was taken from My Patriot Supply.
The De-Icer... I haven’t heard of it being used to prevent frost but I have used it to apply onto frosted windows and de-ice the window that way.
never use it on a tick, when you use it on a tick it spits its venom, use a tickpen ;)
Thank you very much for the good information may God bless your whole family
im into 3d printing, and use alcohol to clean the print bed daily.
Ok?
@@johncarpenter5415 the objective of my comment is that i am in agreeance in that isopropyl alcohol is indeed a versatile product.
Yeah it good for cleaning electronics I use it to clean my phone screen sometimes
@@johncarpenter5415 Shutup Jon
Exactly 👍
Cody, It is also great at killing fleas you may see on your pets and in your home without staining. Just put a spray nozzle in the bottle and spray as needed.
I thought it was going to be about alcohol in whiskey. Foiled again!
I wouldn't use alcohol on a car regularly. it strips protective chemicals off that can cause metals to corrode. also alcohol evaporates if it helps keep the ice clear its probably just because your cleaning your window.
Me: using vodka for everything.
Comrade Stalin would be proud
It's great for cleaning metal, as a degreaser. It's a must have for a bike mechanic. Aside from that, it kills germs, so thats why its used for medics. If your a person who uses this at their job, people are being full on price gouged for it online. I only found it at walmart one time, and there were only 3 bottles, so stocking up was not an option. I like to put sponges through the dishwasher or even the laundry. Boiling water is also good, and vinegar for sanitizing kitchen stuff.That is so neat about the tick removal.
Best not to use for tick removal. It makes the ticks regurgitate and that can more readily spread disease (babosis, limes, RMSF). Tick lasso is the best thing i have found to get all sizes of ticks off dogs
Our family had always used it to relieve bee stings. Put on a cotton ball then apply directly.
My dog absolutely adores me, but if I put alcohol on his wound and then tried to sew him up, he would eat my face.
Very helpful. Gonna go snag a couple bottles. Thanks Cody!
it literally was the number 1 thing that we couldnt get for months. it was in that high demand.
Same here. Fortunately I had literally just stocked up on rubbing alcohol, because I use it for everything, so I just shook my head while everyone went crazy😅
What it was actually scarcer than toilet paper?!
@@garethheathcote4988 I have had no trouble getting toilet paper at any point in 2020.
I just bought that same Pendleton Board Shirt... And I LOVE it!!!
I don't know why but watching today's episode really made me think of Mr. Wizard, any of you remember Mr. Wizard from back in the day?
Christophor S. Wilson mr wizard is the man that the poser Bill Nigh wishes he was.
Wizard FTW
@@thorzyan that is so true!
Yes I loved watching Mr. wizard as a kid. If you have Amazon prime, all his episodes are online. I still watch it with my kids and I’m still learning.
@@Random_DIY that is awesome I will have to check it out.
@@thorzyan When I hear "Mr Wizard" I always think of Don Herbert.
I bought two 18 liter cans of 98.6% Ethanol just as all this stuff hit, I use it for making shellac but it also works for making hand sanitizer, and for alcohol stoves, etc.
It's very useful to have around.
Cheers from Tokyo!
Stu
To the 1% reading this god bless, stay safe and have a wonderful day (my dream is to become a famous motovloger) Thanks ❤️❤️
Thanks bud. Good luck. I'm rooting for you!
this is a bot
Hey titus I thought I would see you here
God bless you, and may he keep you strong in these crazy times
At the VOA transmitter plant the alcohol is used to clean HV insulators in the transmitters. Also vacuum tube envelopes,vacuum capacitor envelopes. Cleaning parts before silver soldering or conventional soldering. Here they buy it in cases of 1 gal cans.
12 minute video posted 6 minutes ago and already has a downvote. Some people just have nothing better to do now don't they? Thanks for what I'm sure is a video I will enjoy Cody.
I used isopropyl alcohol for cleaning tape recorder heads and the tape path the machine. Also for cassette recorders and tape cartridge machines. At the VOA studios they bought the alcohol in 5 gallon cans-all of us in the maintenance shop there had small bottles we filled and kept in toolboxes or field recording job kits. Now with digital-the use of alcohol has largely disappeared. Sad! Loved using the stuff as a “head” cleaner.
Soon as we started getting hints of Covid out of China, I bought gallons of this stuff. Easy peasy no big deal at the time. Haven't regretted it at all.