Alright, quick update.
I took everything apart and labeled them to as where they go. I also toweled everything off the best I could. I set up a house fan and blew air across the everything overnight which did wonders in drying stuff off.
WotTheFook wrote:
A water displacing aerosol like Pocket Rocket or WD-40 will also stop things from rusting until you can dry them out properly.
My father had suggested this too so that's what I'm doing as I go. Great suggestion btw.
I found an old pillowcase, with the component to be dried inside it, fastened to the nozzle of a hair dryer with a rubber band works wonders, as you aren't heating the entire room just to dry a floppy drive out.
Wow, another good idea and it seems a bit safer than using the oven. I'm so doing this.
You may be pleasantly surprised at what may have survived, I have known an A500, left out in the rain for months in a back garden, come back to life once cleaned and dried.
:-o I'm trying to think of a logical reason to put an A500 in the backyard and out in the elements other than the turnips needed an occasional game of lemmings. However, if that miggy came back from the watery grave then I have a good feeling about mine.
webmany wrote:
Another thing you can do is cover it in rice and leave it for two days. The rice will soak up any moisture. Used this to save a cell phone once.
This actually intrigued me so I'm trying it for some of the more water logged stuff that I have. I lost a cell phone to a water hazard in a miniature golf course last year so I wish I would have known that trick. I liked that phone. ;-)
Vlabguy1 wrote:
I bet the computers will be just fine, if you give them enough time to dry out.
I sure hope so. I wouldn't have been half as distraught as I am now if this would have happened to my Wintel box or my Ubuntu box. The hardware is getting so rare anymore and it makes me sad. :-(
Thanks for the suggestions everyone. I'll keep you informed. I know I have a lot of work ahead of me.
Oh, just wanted to let everyone know that those plastic storage containers with the lock on lids you can buy at Wal-mart, Target, or other such store, are worth their cost. My folks had Christmas decorations (some very old) stored in those and they kept all the water out. I've decide that I'm buying several to store my stuff in just in case.