woodenreefer,
I assumed that since you were using acid baths, you were doing so to remove hardness scale, prior to returning that item to the tank it came from....thus my point of "why worry about bacteria?". If the item isn't going right back to the same tank after you acid clean it, why not just air dry it?
Bill,
woodenreefer seemed to be concerned with removing "pathogenic bacteria" from the items. Net dips have an important function in removing protozoan and metazoan contaminants, but their need for controlling bacterial problems is HIGHLY overrated. Most of the aquarium fish "pathogens" are ubiquitous - you can isolate Aeromonas and Pseudomonas from almost every aquarium. Likewise, Mycobacterium marinum can be cultured from most frozen fish foods, and is found in many aquariums. Is there a chance that one tank in a home has a virus or rare bacterial problem and the other tanks in the space don't? It is possible I suppose, but aeresol transport of small particles is difficult to control anyway - so the bug is going to make it around the space on its own....
That said, we found that the 1:10 bleach solution is effective in real world applications in controlling aerobic bacteria of all types.
Jay