I have cleaned several screens for the FE-series as well as for the F3. You can put them in 40% alcohol, but just distilled water did it for me most of the time. If the spot is organic it will soften after a few hours and you can try to lift it with the tip of a very fine paint-brush. I don't expect higher concentrations of ethanol to do much at dissolving dry mold, I'd only try this when really desperate. Acetone would be great but the screen would be gone before the mold. And if it is really mold, good luck, as it will have etched a trace into the material anyway.
But why not try to go further, if it is really distracting. You can get a used screen starting from 40 USD on ebay and replace it with an ever brighter K2-screen (adjust meter accordingly, though).
Taking into account it can be replaced you can try even more aggressive chemicals, say our 40% Ethanol and add 2% H2O2 to this or try 6% citric acid. In any event, dont use mechanic force and in the last step rinse with distilled water and remove remaining droplets with a blower, holding it at the edges with clean gloves.
If it was mine I would try some highly diluted hydrogen peroxide .I have cleaned several screens for the FE-series as well as for the F3. You can put them in 40% alcohol, but just distilled water did it for me most of the time. If the spot is organic it will soften after a few hours and you can try to lift it with the tip of a very fine paint-brush. I don't expect higher concentrations of ethanol to do much at dissolving dry mold, I'd only try this when really desperate. Acetone would be great but the screen would be gone before the mold. And if it is really mold, good luck, as it will have etched a trace into the material anyway.
But why not try to go further, if it is really distracting. You can get a used screen starting from 40 USD on ebay and replace it with an ever brighter K2-screen (adjust meter accordingly, though).
Taking into account it can be replaced you can try even more aggressive chemicals, say our 40% Ethanol and add 2% H2O2 to this or try 6% citric acid. In any event, dont use mechanic force and in the last step rinse with distilled water and remove remaining droplets with a blower, holding it at the edges with clean gloves.
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