The denatured alcohol can be denatured with many things to make it poison to drink.
All denatured alcohol is not the same, ethanol most of the time will be denatured with Isopropanol or methanol. But it can be denatured with many other chemicals, ethyl acetate, butyl acetate, MIBK (Methyl Isobutyl ketone), MEK (methyl ethyl ketone) some of the common ones used. It all depends on what it is being made for. Most of those listed chemicals will melt plastics. IPA won't.
So I would imagine the kind used for cleaning track (as mentioned) would be denatured with either Isopropanol or the methanol. It should say on the can.
Methanol is listed as poison, so the IPA would be a better choice to use.
The term "rubbing alcohol" has become a general non-specific term for either isopropyl alcohol or ethyl alcohol (ethanol) rubbing-alcohol products.
IPA 99%/ the remaining one percent is water, that is what I use as I get it at work. The 1% water is not going to hurt anything.
IPA 91%/ the rest is 9 % water.
There is 70% and depending on who is bottling it, a fragrance oil might be added. The other % should be water.
The above 3 should only be sold as food grade in the drug store or in the supermarkets.
You can go to a home improvement store and buy the IPA but it is not food grade.
It comes out of the same storage tank but is not regulated with the food grade laws. You have stricter requirements for food grade pertaining to the transportation vessel, sampling and handling.
Tax $$$ are involved too.
If you can find it 99% is the best to use, 91% is good too, I would stay away from the 70%.
Like mentioned 190 or 200 proof grain is the way to go.

:thumbsup:
I get that free at work too, as after they hold the samples for a while it just gets dumped into a waste drum anyway.
What a waste.
