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23 comments
  • As others have said, corrosion.

    To add to that, condensate is rarely pure water. At least, not by the time it’s chilling on the circuits. It’ll pick up any dust, and other stuff fairly quickly; making it not-pure. And conductive.

  • Water dissociates in the presence of electrical voltage into hydrogen and oxygen, and that makes it somewhat conductive (due to ionisation).

    The bigger problem however is corrosion. Said oxygen causes corrosion.

  • You rarely encounter pure water out in the world; even rainwater will have things dissolved in it.

    Even then, there may be chemicals like solder flux or electrolyte from a leaky capacitor that water might dissolve and become conductive enough to cause problems.

23 comments