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Making good Canon LP-E6 battery-pack contacts

battery-pack contacts
Canon LP-E6 battery packs (such as those using in my 70D camera) have two fine connector wires used for charging them.  These seem to be a weak point, as (if left to themselves) they eventually fail to connect well, which means that they do not charge adequately, or (in the field) do not run the equipment at all.

One experimenter discovered that scrubbing them with the edge of a stiff business card helped to make
with (nonCanon this time) charger contacts
them good.  So I considered something more extensive.

Parts: squeeze-bottle of cleaner (I use a citrus-based cleaner from PlanetArk, which seems to be able to clean almost anything off without being excessively invasive); spray-can
equipment required
of WD-40; cheap tooth-brush, paper towels (or tissues, or bum-fodder).

Method: lightly
brush head
spray cleaner onto contacts. Gently but vigorously rub along the contacts with toothbrush. Paper-dry the contacts.

Lightly spray WD-40 onto contacts. Gently but vigorously rub along the contacts with toothbrush. Paper-dry the contacts.

wider view of brush on contacts

(optional) When thoroughly dry, add a touch of light machine oil. This wards off moisture.

This appears to be just as effective with 3rd-party battery packs.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Why WD 40? It's not a conductor you'll be insulating your contacts?
austux said…
WD-40 is not used as an insulator.

It was originally intended to be a Water Dispersant (the experimenters’ 40th attempt). It cleans off just about anything which the conventional cleaner misses including the conventional cleaning solution.

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