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โก Keep your connections flawless and your gear sounding pro-level!
Hosa CAIG DeoxIT Contact Cleaner is a 5 oz aerosol spray designed to rapidly clean and chemically improve electrical contacts and metal surfaces. Highly rated and trusted by professionals, it removes corrosion and static to enhance conductivity and prolong equipment life, making it essential for maintaining electronics and musical gear.








| ASIN | B00006LVEU |
| Best Sellers Rank | #622 in Automotive ( See Top 100 in Automotive ) #2 in Electrical Cleaners |
| Brand | Hosa |
| Brand Name | Hosa |
| Cleaning Agent Formulation | Hard Surface Cleaner |
| Contains Liquid Contents? | Yes |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 14,568 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00728736021716 |
| Item Form | Aerosol |
| Item Type Name | Instrument Cable |
| Item Volume | 148 Milliliters |
| Item Weight | 142 Grams |
| Manufacturer | Hosa |
| Material Feature | Spray |
| Material Features | Spray |
| Model Number | HOS D5S6 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Part Number | FBA_DeoxIT D5S-6 |
| Scent | Hosa |
| Size | 5 oz (Pack of 1) |
| Special Features | Antibacterial |
| Specific Uses For Product | Contact |
| Surface Recommendation | Metal |
| UPC | 728736021716 |
| Unit Count | 142 Grams |
| Warranty Description | Limited lifetime |
G**N
Useful contact cleaner for electronics
I found this CAIG DeoxIT spray to be quite helpful when cleaning my guitar pedals. itโs easy to apply and works well to remove corrosion and static. however, the spray bottle is a bit awkward to handle at times, which makes precise application tricky. overall, itโs a decent product for keeping my gear in good shape during regular maintenance.
O**N
Excellent product, and you want THIS nozzle design type.
It's an excellent product, that works well. It is esepecially helpful with old potentiometers that are gummed up, scratchy and noisey. Pots that make audible noise through amps, or recording setups, while being turned, are fixed by one or two quick shots of this. I strongly recommend this particular spray top/nozzle design, as opposed to the newer folding spray starw. Caig should be repeatedly wacked over the head with bamboo poles for fobbing that terrible desing upon its customers. That other nozzle design leaks product all over the floor during and even after use. You're losing what you pay for. So to be clear, this particular nozzle design is the one you want, *NOT* the folding straw design. Just so you know.
J**O
Amazing stuff! We call it "Technician in a Can".
I've used one form or another of this product since the mid '70s and it's fantastic. I'd found out about it from a magazine back then called Audio Amateur and at that time, the similar product was called Cramolin. As with DeoxIT, it came in a red and a blue variety. The blue is/was a preservative for newly manufactured contacts and the red is/was a cleaner and preservative. Theoretically, the blue may provide longer/better protection while the red is better for cleaning and restoring contacts which are already oxidized. You can clean contacts with the red, then remove it, then treat with the blue to get the best protection of already oxidized contacts, but in practice, the red alone works so well that it's extremely effective to simply clean and treat the contacts in one step using only the red. As a result, I use about one can of blue for every ten or more cans of the red. For most uses, most folks only need the red (D) variety. I don't want that to make it sound like I go through cans and cans of the stuff, but since I work in the electronics field, I do use a lot more than most people. As has been mentioned in several other reviews, you need very little of it to do most jobs. A single can will last a very long time even for someone who is constantly working on a lot of equipment. After finding out how well it worked on audio connections and potentiometers, I introduced the folks at the electronics company where I worked to it. All of the technicians and engineers were amazed and it soon became a staple. We designed, manufactured, installed, and serviced various telemetry and process control equipment. A lot of this gear as well as equipment made by others that we were called upon to service was in areas with corrosive atmospheres like oilfield, refinery, water/wastewater treatment, laboratory, and other locations where hydrogen sulfide, chlorine, hydrochloric acid fumes, etc., are present, leading to lots of contact-related problems. It's been extremely effective over these many years, and although the name and formula has changed since the "Cramolin" days, the new stuff seems to still be very good. I've also used it on very high voltage connectors and one of the amazing properties of it is that while it improves contact integrity and lowers contact resistance dramatically, it does not break down and cause leakage or flashover when used on high voltage systems. I've used it for years on photomultiplier tube and Geiger tube devices (radiation survey and monitoring equipment), and never had any problems with it. These systems usually operate with bias voltages between 900 and 1500 Volts, but sometimes run up to 2500V. A fantastic example of how it works was something we did many years ago where we had a batch of very old thermal self-resetting circuit breaker devices in a system. The problem was that they had silver contacts. Silver itself is the best conductor of all elements, but it is very reactive and oxidizes (tarnishes) very easily. These devices were sealed and "non-repairable". But their contact resistance was unacceptably high. I mixed a solution of Cramolin Red and a solvent (probably Freon TF back in those days), put it in a glass jar, and simply dropped these breakers into it and kept them submerged until the bubbles stopped coming out to make sure they were totally flooded with the solution. We then took them out, letting the fluid run back out of them, and then rapped them on a desk a dozen times or so to make the contacts inside "jiggle" a bit. That was enough to let the Cramolin work its way between the closed contacts. Measuring a number of these breakers before and after the treatment, the resistances started out between 100 and 200 milliohms. After treating them, the typical resistance went down to around 6 milliohms! The high current and low voltage these devices needed to carry meant that the voltage drops across them had been unacceptably high, but post-treatment, they operated beautifully. And stayed that way for years. Various other contacts which would heat up and cause other problems prior to treatment operated cool and with extremely low voltage drops after treatment. I've personally "repaired" countless potentiometers, switches, and various connectors over the years with this stuff. We call it "Technician in a Can", and it lives up to that name. I pre-treat a LOT of contacts prior to crimping them onto their wires, and it lowers the mating forces and improves the reliability of virtually any connector. It truly is special stuff. It's indispensable for technicians, manufacturers, audiophiles, etc. If I had a 55 gallon drum of it, I could take entire pre-amps and other audio gear and dunk it to fix all of the bad switch contacts and pots in one quick operation. :) The only thing that's a minor issue is that as with any contact cleaner that has (or is nothing but) a solvent, it will flush away the viscous goo that's often used to make a potentiometer have a "silky" feel to it when rotating. So when you're treating a pot, it's best to try not to allow any to get to the shaft/bushing part of the pot if you want to preserve the grease that's in that annulus. But it often totally fixes a "scratchy" pot by simply getting it on the resistive pad and then running the pot back and forth a dozen times or so. As with so many things, for some reason, manufacturers just love to make pot wipers with silver plating. Bad idea! But all too common. Once that wiper tarnishes, the pot will sound awful since silver oxide is an insulator. The DeoxIT usually allows that oxide layer to be removed by simply rotating the pot a dozen times or so, and then it coats the wiper and the resistive element, preventing future problems and leaving the pot working/sounding excellent. Anyhow, all I can say is that this product has served me extremely well for nearly 40 years, and I highly recommend it.
P**A
Handy cleaner for guitar pedals
Quick to use and effective at cleaning corrosion from my pedals, this spray helped improve the sound quality during practice. I did find the bottle a little awkward to handle sometimes, making precise spraying a bit challenging. Still, it's a useful option for routine gear maintenance that keeps everything working smoothly.
C**.
Nozzle straw didn't fit, but the cleaner worked fine
Great product, but lousy packaging. The cap was surprisingly difficult to remove, almost to the point of crushing the plastic. The spray straw didn't fit the nozzle. I had to ream the nozzle hole and scrape down the end of the straw to insert it into the spray nozzle. Way too big of a hassle. The product worked well and saved me from replacing a switch that was intermittent.
J**N
A Must-Have for Every Connector โ I Use It on Everything Including My 7-Pin
A Must-Have for Every Connector โ I Use It on Everything Including My 7-Pin This CAIG DeoxIT contact cleaner is an absolute essential in my maintenance kit and earns every bit of 5 stars without hesitation. I use it on all my connectors across the boardโ7-pin trailer connectors, electrical connections on the RV, automotive connectors, and anything else that connects to another connector. The difference it makes in maintaining clean, low-resistance connections is genuinely noticeable, especially on connectors that see regular outdoor exposure, moisture, and corrosion over time. A quick spray cleans oxidation and contaminants off contact surfaces, improves conductivity, and helps protect against future corrosionโwhich is exactly what you want on critical electrical connections like trailer wiring, lighting circuits, and power connections. The 5 oz spray size gives good coverage and lasts a reasonable amount of time with regular use, and the precision spray makes it easy to target specific connectors without overspray. CAIG is a trusted, professional-grade brand that electricians and technicians rely on for good reason, and this product lives up to that reputation completely. If you own an RV, tow a trailer, or work with electrical connectors regularly, this is one of those products you didn't know you needed until you tried itโand then you'll never be without it. Highly recommended.
K**O
Handy contact cleaner for electronics
So far, iโve found this contact cleaner to be pretty helpful when cleaning my guitar pedals and audio gear. the spray comes out nicely and covers the surface well. itโs handy for quick fixes. however, i wish the spray bottle was a bit larger because i find myself running out sooner than i'd like. still, it works well for small jobs and keeps my equipment noise-free. definitely a good addition to my toolkit.
D**O
Revives old gear.
This stuff made a lot of old music gear I have work again. It really is magic for electronics. Itโs now the first thing I try when switches or knobs/pots donโt work.
T**T
Hosa Deoxit is the One
I first encountered Deoxit when editing a music magazine. The distributing company sent out a sample kit. I promptly took it home and attacked my old NAD 2020, a Norwegian designed and Chinese built integrated amp for our stereo system, vintage....1976 no less. I'd pushed the NAD aside for a couple of years because every single pot, knob, any moving object that adjusted the sound had gone terribly bad. The loud rude noises and fire cracker crackles sometimes got the dog jumping from his repose on the couch. With one treatment with spray and some wipes, and not having to go inside the unit....did it all from the outside....it totally cleared up all the problems: made pots, knobs, sliders, etc, easy to set in motion. Eliminated completely any noise: snap, crackles, pops. Completely. Only recently, ten years later, has one of the knobs exhibited any noise. You spend a little more on Deoxit but it saves you big time. The next occasion was a few weeks ago and purchasing the Hosa Deoxit spray from Amazon.ca for a problem in my home studio. Similar results, perhaps not as dramatic, but the deal is this: it cleans and clears anything out of the way of the audio signal path. With no impediments, no sludge or oxidized soldering jobs, connections, etc the result is better, fuller, clearer sound devoid of those snaps, crackles, etc. Follow directions. Do not use and operate a motor vehicle. Seeing if you're alert. Tbw
L**Y
The magic elixir
Rated by the industry for reviving and cleaning dirty potentiometers or scratchy faders, and any other bad-contacts/switches. This has been the cheapest price i've found online but it is still quite expensive for what it is. Not sure if we are paying for a magic formula or the name. Perhaps there are cheaper alternatives out there but trial and error testing the competition may not be a cost effective experiment.
H**A
EXCELENTE
Es un producto de excelente calidad.
R**B
awesome
perfect to get rid of scratchy noise from your pots
M**T
Actually works
Was sceptical of this product, particularly given its price but wanted to try something before sending my vintage amplifier in for an expensive service. Used Deoxit and it actually worked, fixed the issues with the left channel on my amp for the fraction of the cost of a service
Trustpilot
1 month ago
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