Mostly the same kinds of electronics related chemicals listed. Plus welding gasses, bunch of brazing fluxes (most dangerous chemicals I own, I think), propane, a box of assorted vacuum oils and greases, etc.
Oh, and I don't think anyone mentioned polyurethane woodworking glue. Great stuff.
A few less common ones:
- A 1Kg aluminium bottle of Nutmeg oil. Inherited from a deceased friend. Smells wonderful.
- Very old 500ml glass bottle of 'Pure gum turpentine' ie the real stuff from before 'mineral turps'.
This also smells very nice. Don't use it for anything, just a museum piece.
- Bottle of 'oil paint medium'. This is a mix of linseed oil and turps. Relic from my high school years.
- Large glass jar with home made insulating lid and two .999 silver rods, containing distilled water with dissolved fine silver particles. The proverbial 'colloidal silver'. It has an interesting taste. One of those 'try it myself and see' things, a couple of years ago.
A safety warning worth mentioning. In the course of cleaning up assorted old test equipment, I've tried various solvents for different cleaning tasks. Now I mainly use mineral turps, methylated spirit and spray cleaner for cabinet and metalwork cleaning, kerosene for dirty cables, and compressed air, brushing and IPA for circuit boards, etc.
But early on I had been using 'White spirits' (hardware store product name) for cleaning cases. It works quite well, and doesn't harm plastics, paints, etc. But... it turns out it is quite harmful to humans, though there's no warning on the label.
Because I'd typically hold cloth pads soaked in it, I was getting skin contact on my thumb and 1st two finger tips. Over about a year I started to develop tingling in those fingers and an ache extending up my arm, eventually reaching the shoulder. Took a while to connect the white spirits contact to the neural problem, but then tried long term switching in it's use, and it definitely correlated. Stopped using white spirits altogether, and the problem went away over about six months. No noticeable residual effect, fortunately.
That was unrelated to an episode of much more serious effects from handling molybdenum-impregnated teflon insulated wire, that did leave some permanent damage.