That's a nice early-ish production SE/30 board.
Cleaning: Never had to deal with battery corrosion like this, but if it helps, what I do is... I spray boards with foaming industrial Simple Green (no coloring), let it sit for ten minutes, rinse under a faucet for sheeting action, then pour about a 1/4-1/2 gallon of distilled water on it, then rinse with 99% isopropyl. Everyone has their own method. Mine is based mostly on economy, you ideally shouldn't rinse a PCB under a faucet, but my hope is that the relatively cheap distilled water chased by alcohol pushes away most of the crap from the tap water because I don't let the tap water rest on the board. I can attest to this method working very well so far on about ten Macs and about as many Tek scopes, but again, I've never had to deal with that level of battery corrosion. The vinegar sounds good though, I may experiment with that.
Back to your board, if it was the later bright green version with white plastics, I'd pass on this much work trying to revive it. The one you have is a much more sturdy board and more likely to suffer the cleaning that you're doing.
Cleaning: Never had to deal with battery corrosion like this, but if it helps, what I do is... I spray boards with foaming industrial Simple Green (no coloring), let it sit for ten minutes, rinse under a faucet for sheeting action, then pour about a 1/4-1/2 gallon of distilled water on it, then rinse with 99% isopropyl. Everyone has their own method. Mine is based mostly on economy, you ideally shouldn't rinse a PCB under a faucet, but my hope is that the relatively cheap distilled water chased by alcohol pushes away most of the crap from the tap water because I don't let the tap water rest on the board. I can attest to this method working very well so far on about ten Macs and about as many Tek scopes, but again, I've never had to deal with that level of battery corrosion. The vinegar sounds good though, I may experiment with that.
Back to your board, if it was the later bright green version with white plastics, I'd pass on this much work trying to revive it. The one you have is a much more sturdy board and more likely to suffer the cleaning that you're doing.


