Wash it off?
wash it off quickly with soap and water
Baking soda works well if you apply it immediately after washing the acid off. If you wash the acid off quick enough you will get no burn.
Pour a solution of water mixed with baking soda on the battery, let it sit for 5 minutes, and then wash it off with plain water. The baking soda will neutralize the acid.
Battery acid is sulfuric acid. Sulfuric acid is very corrosive and will burn your skin if not washed off very quickly.
Anytime you run an automobile battery down you shorten the life of that battery. An acid leak in a sealed battery means the battery must be replaced. If it is leaking from a battery in a battery with filler caps just add distilled water to the full mark and wash the acid off the vehicle battery compartment.
No, you should remove the battery and buy a new one trading the old battery in. The fluid leaking is partially sulfuric acid. It is very corrosive and will eat the paint right off the vehicle. It will cause a serious rust problem. Remove the battery and wash the area down with a mixture of water and baking soda to neutralize the acid. Do not get the fluid on your hands or clothes.
No, battery acid (sulfuric acid) is not the strongest acid. The Strongest acid is fluoroantimonic acid. Bear in mind the acid in a battery is in a diluted state-not concentrated. Although it could blind you, if it gets on the skin it will create a burning sensation before it does any permanent damage and you can wash it off or neutralize.
Yes, and then wash the mineral spirits off your hands with soap and warm water.
The acid in a standard AA battery is not overly harmful. It is not as strong as the acid from a car battery. The main concern would be eating the battery acid. However, if it touches your skin just wash it off. Honestly over-exposure to sunlight hurts the skin more.
wash them
because it will wash all bacteria off your hands for when you eat food and do anything