Aircraft RADAR array test box was a nice box lined with carbon foam waffle on the walls. Replace any of the foam and you had to burn it in first, which meant rolling it to the window, shoving the end outside and running the unit under test for about an hour till the smoke cleared and it was burnt in. The smell lingered for about 2 weeks though. Magnetron test load on the bench was a section of rectangular waveguide around a quarter meter long, tapering in thickness from the flange to a weld at the end. Inside it was filled with a blend of ferrite powder and copper dust, with an epoxy added to keep the lot in place in the waveguide. Made a pretty efficient place to warm up pies, just put them on the top in the wrapping and foil, and leave for 5 minutes till piping hot. Paper of the pie would be brown and charred underneath from the heat, but the pies were fine as the foil base provided enough heat spreading.
Now we also used the test bench to check AWS systems, so doing that we had to make sure no flights were overhead, they did not like getting that lock on warning from testing using the actual missile seeker pattern.
Now, on my bench I have some bottles of ethanol 180 proof, some methanol 95% pure and some MEK solvent, all in glass bottles. Never use them directly but always fill a small dropper bottle with the solvent instead, so the amount on the bench is limited ,and it is easier to apply where needed.