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I discovered that "Windex" and my flat 17" Hansol CRT monitor screen's outer dark coating don't mix. One of them had to go, as they say, but in my case, BOTH went. You'd think that Windex, being the glass cleaner that it is, would be effective for monitor screens, which are, after all, glass. Yes, it's effective. Problem is it's too effective.
Anyway, does anyone know of a specific chemical that's safe for LCD screens?

2007-03-23 12:14:04 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Hardware Monitors

4 answers

Use a damp cloth. Or go to Best Buy and get the screen wipes they sell. Never use an amonia base product on your LCD screens, that includes big screen TV's too. Good luck with the new one.

2007-03-23 12:26:02 · answer #1 · answered by DaDiva 4 · 0 0

purely use a humid (with water) lint loose cloth, wipe gently then use yet another (dry) cloth and wipe back. make helpful that the show is punctiliously dry as even water can injury an liquid crystal show show if left on it. do not use detergents, cleaners or the different nonsense as those will certainly injury your show interior the long-term. do not hardship with particularly formulated cleansing cloths from laptop shops as those are a rip off, all you prefer is solid previous faucet water.

2016-10-19 11:20:24 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Denatured Alcohol but use only a damped cloth full of it

2007-03-23 12:24:20 · answer #3 · answered by ulayhere 4 · 0 0

NEVER-NEVER-NEVER clean computer monitors with any cleaner that contains ammonia - such as Windex.

Goes for any coated opticals - autoglass, glasses. lenses, etc.

2007-03-25 19:32:02 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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