-----Original Message-----
From: owner-support@dieboldes.com [mailto:owner-support@dieboldes.com]On Behalf Of Green, Pat
Sent: Friday, October 04, 2002 8:17 AM
To: DES - support
Subject: RE: VAC and waterJames,Is the residue on the chip contacts themselves or just on the white plastic area? I will have someone ask the manufacturer for their opinion, but I am concerned that a cleaner could cause the contacts to corrode. Also, we need to be careful not to gum up or contaminate the contacts within the AVTS reader. I will respond again when I have more information.Pat-----Original Message-----
From: James Rellinger [mailto:jamesrellinger@dieboldes.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 03, 2002 7:08 PM
To: Diebold Support
Subject: VAC and waterTeam;As a matter of QC, we in Georgia acceptance tested all of our Voter Access Cards. During the testing, we bundled them into groups of 20 to ease the deployment process. The grouping was done using regular office scotch tape.We discovered that the tape was adhering so well to the cards that a gummy residue was being left on the cards. This gum was causing extreme friction when placing and removing them from the encoder. We immediately stopped using scotch tape and changed to rubber bands.Now, we have several hundred VACs that need to be cleaned. We plan to use a citrus-based gum remover to remove the gum and then rinse them all with mild soap and water.Our concerns are these:
- Can the chip be damaged by the citrus cleaner?
- Can the chip be damaged by mild soap and water?
- Can the chip withstand a 20 minute deep soaking in a citrus cleaner?
- Can the chip withstand a dishpan-style soap and water rinse?
- Does the risk of chip failure plus the man-hours paid to restore the cards justify a discarding and replacement of an approximate 1500 cards.
Best Regards,
James P. Rellinger, MCSEManager of Engineering, Georgia Operations
Diebold Election Systems(770) 231-6468@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@