[sdiy] Slide pot cleaning

Mike Beauchamp list at mikebeauchamp.com
Thu Apr 30 00:18:46 CEST 2026


I want to suggest desoldering them, disassembling, cleaning and 
re-lubricating them. But even with my hakko desoldering iron, I've 
occasionally lifted pads off circuit boards while doing this. Single 
sided boards are especially easily to mess up, because they don't have 
plated thru-holes holding things together.

If you've done it before, and know how to rework a board if a pad lifts, 
go for it. You could also see if replacement pots are available through 
mouser that have the same footprint dimensions and lever dimensions 
(check the datasheets). Some slide pots are also available with an 
integrated dust cover in case the synth ends up under another bed for 10 
years.

Easiest thing is to just use Deoxit Fader F5, spray and move the slider 
around a bunch of times.

Mike









On 2026-04-28 07:53, rburnett at richieburnett.co.uk wrote:
> Can anyone recommend a good process for cleaning dust our of slide 
> potentiometers on an old Roland SH-09?
> 
> The synth was stored underneath a bed in the spare room when we moved 
> house about ten years ago, and I *thought* it had a dust cover over it! 
> It turns out it didn't (>.<)  and the slide pots are in quite bad shape 
> now.
> 
> The synth is functional but the sliders feel scratchy and there is 
> obviously intermittent electrical contact because cutoff, LFO rate, etc 
> jump around a lot when the sliders are adjusted.  The slide switches are 
> okay, and the keys aren't too bad after a bit of use.
> 
> I've removed the front panel and also found that there is some sort of 
> black felt/foam sheet that was obviously originally meant to be a dust 
> shield for the slide pots.  The problem is that this material has become 
> brittle and literally crumbles upon touching.  Can anyone recommend a 
> good material to replace this with?
> 
> If I can fix the pots with a squirt of some magic spray that would be 
> fantastic, but I'm also prepared to de-solder then and carefully open 
> them up for cleaning if that is what is required.  I would rather take 
> time to do the job properly, but not sure what is the best way to 
> proceed?  I have access to a dry compressed-air line, dish soap, cotton 
> buds, Isopropyl alcohol, acetone, silicone grease, 
> soldering/de-soldering tools, etc, but don't want to risk making the 
> problem worse without asking for advice first.
> 
> Thanks in advance for any advice,
> 
> -Richie,
> ________________________________________________________
> This is the Synth-diy mailing list
> Submit email to: Synth-diy at synth-diy.org
> View archive at: https://synth-diy.org/pipermail/synth-diy/
> Check your settings at: https://synth-diy.org/mailman/listinfo/synth-diy
> Selling or trading? Use marketplace at synth-diy.org
> 


More information about the Synth-diy mailing list