Message from @Babilon

Discord ID: 232529700331716609


2016-10-03 15:44:43 UTC  

They are cheao

2016-10-03 15:44:46 UTC  

Cheap*

2016-10-03 15:44:54 UTC  

You can even buy em at chink land

2016-10-03 15:44:54 UTC  

of course

2016-10-03 15:45:25 UTC  

Wouldn't trust canned air for the insides of your pc

2016-10-03 15:45:42 UTC  

how so? pretty much everyone uses it to clean up

2016-10-03 15:45:49 UTC  

spray it for too long and it starts spewing ice

2016-10-03 15:45:58 UTC  

and or ice water

2016-10-03 15:46:14 UTC  

I think that's just condensation

2016-10-03 15:46:17 UTC  

it evaporates pretty quickly

2016-10-03 15:46:19 UTC  

and in any case

2016-10-03 15:46:28 UTC  

you shouldn't spray upside down or for very long periods of time

2016-10-03 15:46:33 UTC  

if it gets too cold just give it a small break

2016-10-03 15:48:48 UTC  

e sure to hold the compressed air can vertical while pressing its 'air-release'.

If you hold it at any other angle than perpendicular to the ground, liquid can omit from the can (which can take a few minutes to evaporate)

2016-10-03 15:48:49 UTC  

sure to hold the compressed air can vertical while pressing its 'air-release'.

If you hold it at any other angle than perpendicular to the ground, liquid can omit from the can (which can take a few minutes to evaporate) did it 😒 🔫

2016-10-03 15:48:54 UTC  

lol

2016-10-03 15:49:09 UTC  

kek

2016-10-03 15:49:15 UTC  

You can stil fuck up the insides with it if you spray it wrong

2016-10-03 15:49:40 UTC  

you'd have to not only spray it wrong, but quickly plug it back in

2016-10-03 15:49:41 UTC  

idk

2016-10-03 15:50:00 UTC  

seems safe enough if you are careful, done it for years

2016-10-03 15:51:00 UTC  

either that or use a decent air compressor

2016-10-03 15:51:12 UTC  

actual air compressor's the best

2016-10-03 15:51:17 UTC  

yeah

2016-10-03 15:51:22 UTC  

just don't set the bar higher than 3

2016-10-03 15:51:57 UTC  

don't wanna blow the caps off

2016-10-03 15:52:26 UTC  

i've heard some compressors can accumulate moisture, never encountered that problem myself

2016-10-03 16:46:25 UTC  

e sure to hold the compressed air can vertical while pressing its 'air-release'.

If you hold it at any other angle than perpendicular to the ground, liquid can omit from the can (which can take a few minutes to evaporate)

2016-10-03 16:46:26 UTC  

sure to hold the compressed air can vertical while pressing its 'air-release'.

If you hold it at any other angle than perpendicular to the ground, liquid can omit from the can (which can take a few minutes to evaporate) did it 😒 🔫

2016-10-03 16:46:55 UTC  

@Tribit 'starts spewing ice'

2016-10-03 16:47:15 UTC  

@Tribit do you know how a refrigerator works

2016-10-03 16:47:41 UTC  

when a gas expands it absorbs heat to do so

2016-10-03 16:48:02 UTC  

as the pressure in the canned air drops, the remaining gas expands which cools it

2016-10-03 16:48:45 UTC  

you're spraying cold air at that point

2016-10-03 16:48:54 UTC  

which causes condensation to freeze on whatever you spray

2016-10-03 16:48:59 UTC  

it doesn't 'spray water' lol

2016-10-03 16:50:40 UTC  

and yes compressors can accumulate moisture in their air tank, but many have moisture filters built in these days

2016-10-03 16:51:43 UTC  

yeah exactly

2016-10-03 16:52:17 UTC  

in any case

2016-10-03 16:52:30 UTC  

if there's a slight hint of moisture from condensation or the air tank

2016-10-03 16:52:53 UTC  

it should go away pretty quickly