Good stuff. Cuts any kind of grease. They sell it in the paint department in quart cans. Denatured alcohol which is ethanol (drinking alcohol) spiked with something to make it undrinkable. That way they can sell it for home and industrial uses without paying the $10.50 a gallon federal booze tax. It used as stove fuel and shellac thinner.
Around the house, it cut thru some stubborn film on my kitchen floor. A combination of dirt, spills, and too much Mop-n-Glow formed a grungy film that Pine-Sol won't touch. Alcohol cut right thru it. Ancient Formica table top had acquired a stickiness that 409 wouldn't touch. Alcohol cut right thru it.
And for a tour de force, it fixed the mouse. Older mechanical mouse, with the rubber mouse ball inside it. It was getting flakey, cursor would get stuck, fail to move, PITA. Wiped down the little rollers inside with a rag soaked in alcohol. That cut the greasy crud buildup and now the mouse is smooth as new.
Alcohol is safe on nearly every thing found in the home. Paint, plastics, fabrics and wood, EXCEPT wood finished in shellac. The stuff is shellac thinner, and it will dissolve a hardened shellac surface, making the shellac go all soft and sticky, like when it was first brushed on. Not good. Fortunately all factory (store bought) furniture is done in lacquer. The only shellac finished items in the typical home are antiques, or home refinish projects. I have a single straight chair that I refinished in shellac, but if you don't do your own refinishing, you probably don't have anything finished in shellac. Not to worry.
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