N-n-no, she can't be!
I'm sorry, we did all we could but she never should have gone in that washing machine.
Is... is that her?
{
"lightbox_close": "Close",
"lightbox_next": "Next",
"lightbox_previous": "Previous",
"lightbox_error": "The requested content cannot be loaded. Please try again later.",
"lightbox_start_slideshow": "Start slideshow",
"lightbox_stop_slideshow": "Stop slideshow",
"lightbox_full_screen": "Full screen",
"lightbox_thumbnails": "Thumbnails",
"lightbox_download": "Download",
"lightbox_share": "Share",
"lightbox_zoom": "Zoom",
"lightbox_new_window": "New window",
"lightbox_toggle_sidebar": "Toggle sidebar"
}
No, Jim, don't open that cover!
....
....
Oh... my... god...
I'm so sorry, Jim.
Sigh.
I was out burying cable for my dog's invisible fence and the only thing in my pockets was the Nexus. Once I came in covered in mud and mostly soaking wet I undressed at the washing machine putting my clothes directly in the water. Since I didn't have my pockets full with the 4 items always in them (phone, keys, knife and wallet) I didn't think to check them.
After about 10 minutes I went to make a call and immediately realized what I had done. I ran to the washing machine in the dark hallway and tore open the lid. It was exactly like the cut scenes in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time when Link opens a treasure chest.
At the same time I thought "F**CK!" and "She's still alive!".
I reached into the warm, soapy, agitating water and pulled out a Nexus with a grey screen and the camera LED on full blast. I pulled the battery and disassembled the phone (surprisingly easy, btw) and went to the store for some rice.
I'll give it until tomorrow morning to dry out before I reassemble and test but I get the feeling I'll be buying a new Nexus at Verizon tomorrow.
Upsides to this incident?
-Free* spare battery.
-Spare case to try and paint and remove the Verizon logo. If all goes well I can put the new Nexus in the old case.
*Actually $649.99
UPDATE!
SHE'S ALIVE!!!!!!!
9 or so hours in rice on a heating pad under some fleece blankets and she's alive! There isn't any noticeable damage either! Both cameras are fantastic, no water or water spots under the screen, sound is good, all buttons work and the response is great as well! Charging and USB connections work fine.
Except.... I don't have any signal and when I go to make a call it says "Mobile Network Not Available"
I wonder if the SIM card is shot. I'd hate to think EVERYTHING works on my phone except the phone part... but that is how my luck generally works. I'll go to the store in the morning and get a new SIM.
Oh, how I hope it's the SIM...
So the recipe for water damage appears to be:
1) Pull battery and disassemble the phone to it's smallest parts.
2) Wipe dry with a paper towel.
3) Let it sit for about 30 minutes while you go to the store for some rice and stop at Arby's for a Beef 'n Cheddar. Optional
3) Submerge in Enriched Medium Grain Rice.
4) Seal container and place on a heating pad on its highest setting, covering with blankets.
5) Let it sit for 9 hours.
6) Get impatient. Optional
7) Reassemble.
Minor update: I took out the SIM and rebooted. It has the same error without the SIM and doesn't say anything like "No SIM Card Detected" so hopefully it is the SIM that's the problem.
My condolences. But as you said, you now have a spare battery (maybe). If I had $649 for every time I did something similar, I'd have retired before I started.
Here's hoping you get a pleasant surprise when you reassemble.
That's not a pretty sight. Shouldn't it be in the rice longer than one night, though? I've never had to do this myself yet, but I've read somewhere that you should keep them in there for a few days at least.
Best of luck whenever and however you try to reassemble it!
mudferret said:
My condolences. But as you said, you now have a spare battery (maybe). If I had $649 for every time I did something similar, I'd have retired before I started.
Here's hoping you get a pleasant surprise when you reassemble.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I measured the battery voltage at 4.01V still so it SHOULD still work. But idk about the NFC antenna and/or charging circuits.
Akerskuuug said:
That's not a pretty sight. Shouldn't it be in the rice longer than one night, though? I've never had to do this myself yet, but I've read somewhere that you should keep them in there for a few days at least.
Best of luck whenever and however you try to reassemble it!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't think it matters this time. It was swishing around underwater for a good few minutes at least. I figure I have to TRY to fix it but I don't see how it can't be permanently damaged.
chjade84 said:
I'll give it until tomorrow morning to dry out before I reassemble and test but I get the feeling I'll be buying a new Nexus at Verizon tomorrow.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Don't be too sure. I did something similar 2 weeks after I bought my D1 on launch day. I walked in to the Verizon store and threw myself at the mercy of the manager expecting to pay full price for a new one. The manager pulled my records up, saw how long I was a customer and ordered me a warranty replacement device right there. No charge. I did have to reuse my battery but she worked well up to the day I bought my GNex.
The manager told me that they will try to help someone as long as they don't come in and try a BS story.
You never know! Good luck to you!
Just a thought, if it's still borked after you reassemble it, you could try rinsing with distilled water and stick it in rice again. I have a feeling laundry soap residues are fairly reactive and it may not take much of a deposit to have an effect. Judging by all the leads you have on your workbench however I'd say you know your way around the voodoo of electricity.
mudferret said:
Just a thought, if it's still borked after you reassemble it, you could try rinsing with distilled water and stick it in rice again. I have a feeling laundry soap residues are fairly reactive and it may not take much of a deposit to have an effect. Judging by all the leads you have on your workbench however I'd say you know your way around the voodoo of electricity.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I agree with this too.you shouldn't let the phone dry out with all the liquid soap inside. Rinse it with distilled water and then plunge it in the bag of rice
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk
Don't throw in the towel just yet.
Something similar happened almost 2 years ago with my husband's Droid Eris.
It was just a few weeks old and along with hubby's pants it went in the washer.
A full wash cycle later I transfer the wet mess in to the dryer and hmm what is this *clink* *clink*?
Disassembled, put in rice. 2 days later the phone didn't show any signs of life, but when I put a different battery it came alive and even the few water spots under the screen disappeared eventually.
It works flawlessly, hubby uses it to this day still.
Turns out the battery actually survived as well, just needed a bit longer in the rice. It is his main battery!
Cheers!
@OP:
+1 for the Ocarina of Time reference!
Sorry about the phone.
warranty that ****!!!!!! they wont know... tell them u didnt do n e thing n it started effing up on u! play stupid.... seriously dude.... i broke a phone in a half once took it to verizon after reassembling it... lol they gave me a new one... im telling u... play stupid n hope to get a rep that doesnt know what the **** they r doing...
isn't there a get wet-water indicator under the battery?
I'm sure that is one of the first things they look for...
Some times honesty is the best policy...
Good Luck!
bake it in a toaster oven. i washed my ipod, full cycle. it came out still on. riced etc.. but once off it wouldnt turn on. then i baked it in the toaster at about 180'F for about 24 hours. still nogo.. after a couple weeks i turned it on, it came on and has been working flawlessly since.
Radsolutionz said:
warranty that ****!!!!!! they wont know... tell them u didnt do n e thing n it started effing up on u! play stupid.... seriously dude.... i broke a phone in a half once took it to verizon after reassembling it... lol they gave me a new one... im telling u... play stupid n hope to get a rep that doesnt know what the **** they r doing...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
and im sure you're also one of the people wondering why phones are so expensive
Radsolutionz said:
warranty that ****!!!!!! they wont know... tell them u didnt do n e thing n it started effing up on u! play stupid.... seriously dude.... i broke a phone in a half once took it to verizon after reassembling it... lol they gave me a new one... im telling u... play stupid n hope to get a rep that doesnt know what the **** they r doing...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What a responsible person.
Radsolutionz said:
warranty that ****!!!!!! they wont know... tell them u didnt do n e thing n it started effing up on u! play stupid.... seriously dude.... i broke a phone in a half once took it to verizon after reassembling it... lol they gave me a new one... im telling u... play stupid n hope to get a rep that doesnt know what the **** they r doing...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
promoting unethical behaviour on a dev forum, that's a new low...
My daughters phone went through a full cycle in the washer too, laid on the counter as nothing had happened to it (she didn't want to confess that she accidently put it in there).
I saw it on the counter and said why is there water around this phone! Of course got the I DON'T KNOW answer.
I took it apart and put it in a container with some rice with a couple of those silica gel packets, left in there for a couple hours and then covered it up.
Left it covered up for about 3 days and, it worked like a charm! Completely dried it out. Worked just fine!
IMO, 24 hours isn't long enough to dry it out completely.....
I've had this happen to me with multiple phones (the cost of having a pool), rice for about 3 days really does wonders. At the most I've had to replace LCDs or batteries. A far cry from the ~$600 for a new phone. I think my most expensive repair was an iPhone LCD for ~$85. You should be able to do the repairs with relative ease. Patience is the key...don't power on the phone for at least 3 days while it's in therice to make sure every ounce of water is gone! Otherwise you may ruin your chances of fixing it.
kgbkny said:
@OP:
+1 for the Ocarina of Time reference!
Sorry about the phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Exactly my thoughts lol. Sorry about the phone though. I hope everything works out for you.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk
Thanks for all the condolences/suggestions/appreciation of Zelda!
toms73novass said:
isn't there a get wet-water indicator under the battery?
I'm sure that is one of the first things they look for...
Some times honesty is the best policy...
Good Luck!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There is. There are 4 in fact.
k.electron said:
bake it in a toaster oven. i washed my ipod, full cycle. it came out still on. riced etc.. but once off it wouldnt turn on. then i baked it in the toaster at about 180'F for about 24 hours. still nogo.. after a couple weeks i turned it on, it came on and has been working flawlessly since.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I put it under all my blankets in bed with the mattress pad heater (best investment ever for cold climates, btw) on high for 9 hours while I was away. I came home to a nice warm bowl of dry rice and the smell of grain. lol
martonikaj said:
What a responsible person.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Indeed. I broke it, I'll buy a new one.
xetas said:
I've had this happen to me with multiple phones (the cost of having a pool), rice for about 3 days really does wonders. At the most I've had to replace LCDs or batteries. A far cry from the ~$600 for a new phone. I think my most expensive repair was an iPhone LCD for ~$85. You should be able to do the repairs with relative ease. Patience is the key...don't power on the phone for at least 3 days while it's in therice to make sure every ounce of water is gone! Otherwise you may ruin your chances of fixing it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've always considered the initial water entry the cause of the damage... short circuits and whatnot. All it takes is a millisecond of water or other conductor in the wrong place to fry some of those IC's.
I've washed a USB stick (I'm not this clumsy I promise... it came off my keychain and I didn't know about it) and got it out of the dryer later, plugged it in and it still worked fine - since there was no voltage when it got wet. IC's are waterproof so once the contacts and other exposed gold/tin parts are dry it should be good to power on.
At least that's my theory. I could be way off base!
please keep us updated, good luck!
Related
I accidentaly put my rhodium in the washing machine (forgot to check my jeans pockets) and it was in there for a few minutes.
When I noticed I took out the battery, SD card and sim card and dryed everything with a towel. I then put it in a bowl of rice for day (read that tip online somewhere) to drain out any excess moisture.
It seems to be completely dry now from the outside, although I can't say for sure about the insides. It still won't turn on.
Any ideas? or is my brand new Rhodium dead?
you get points for positive thinking.
sorry to say, but your toy has had it.
woeds said:
Any ideas? or is my brand new Rhodium dead?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sounds to me like you need to make use of that insurance policy that you sensibly bought for your TP2.
I read somewhere on xda forum that sometimes wet devices would turn on after a couple of days...
If you're not in a hurry, maybe wait some time... but don't hope too much
Wow! got to be more careful next time. This is a very expensive phone. Got to take real good care of it.... "Handle with care"
I guess wait at least 72 hours before turning it on back again and not before that.... else will be RIP.
btw, if your phone is "ON" while in the washer...forget about, get a new one.
One thing to try, sometimes batteries will self destruct and save the phone. Get a replacement and see if it powers up, I know that worked with one I took into the pool a couple years ago.
A hiardryer on very low heat setting normally works quite well for removing moisture
Damn, that's a bummer...
I'd try someone elses battery, but wouldn't expect miracles to happen...
how you didnt know is beyond me! i hope you get it sorted and take more care next time i dont believe it
White rice trick
Here is a trick, take out the battery and put the phone in a bag of white rice. Make sure it's completely covered with rice!. Leave it there for at least 72 hours.
This trick worked on my wife's iPhone. It was revived after being completely dead for 3 days.
Hope it helps.
dam man! thats bad luck!
i hope you use a top brand softener with it other than that it would be sacrilege
one of my phone fell in the toilet once, i removed the battery and took it apart and the washed it with alcohol [not the drinking type] after a day drying it worked just fine.
some phones will work without the battery if connected to the charger. You could try that to see if it's the battery. If you're willing to take it apart there's a spray technicians use to remove all moisture. I've been told never to apply hear (so if you use a hairdryer use one with a cold setting), and yeah, just wait, make sure it's gotten rid of ALL the moisture, and hope for the best. If all the moisture isn't gone, you could short circuit it by trying to turn it on.
My charmer fell into the toilet one evening when I was very drunk. It went of immediately but being too drunk I took it home and left it as it was. The next morning I gave it the hairdryer treatment but it still didnt power up. I threw the phone under my bed and left it for dead. About 4 nights later I woke up at night and I saw 'the light' from under my bed, on closer look my charmer was miraculously switched on. I tried to charge it but it just showed a red light. Later that day I tried again and it started to charge.
The phone went on to serve me without any problems for about 6 more months and I eventually sold it for £80.
Moral of the story; You could get lucky (fingers crossed)
The water itself does not cause the short circuiting. You need purified water to cleans it from the salt and other particles that cause the short circuit.
Yes, water itself is not conductive. Everytime we see someone get electrocuted in the movies thanks to a mixture of water and electricity it's because of the electrolytes. But considering that almost no one has truly pure water running through their washer etc, I just simplified. But the reason why you shouldn't apply heat is due to the catalyst factor of heat. Water and metal don't mix (rust, oxidization), and applying heat can accelerate that process. The end of the story is to get it truly dry, don't apply heat, and keep your fingers, toes, and eyes crossed.
solsearch said:
Yes, water itself is not conductive. Everytime we see someone get electrocuted in the movies thanks to a mixture of water and electricity it's because of the electrolytes. But considering that almost no one has truly pure water running through their washer etc, I just simplified. But the reason why you shouldn't apply heat is due to the catalyst factor of heat. Water and metal don't mix (rust, oxidization), and applying heat can accelerate that process. The end of the story is to get it truly dry, don't apply heat, and keep your fingers, toes, and eyes crossed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is true. While it is possible to safe an electronic device after a soaking for a while, once it has been doused in water, unfortunately, its lifespan is already shortened. If you get it working again, it might last a few months, or even a year. But eventually, corrosion WILL claim it. It might be possible to open it up, and clean every contact, every piece of solder, copper or electronic pathway. If you do that, then maybe you can keep it from corroding.
My roommate lost his phone during winter. Come to find out, he had dropped it in the snow When it melted he found it. It was dead for a few days till it dried out. Then it worked again for about 5-6 months then finally died completely due to corrosion.
Good luck.
Saved about 10 different phones, some multiply times and many other electronic devices, from pools, ocean, garden hoses, sprinklers.
Most important thing is to remove the battery, IMMEDIATELY. We are talking seconds the better, don't think, rip it out. The battery will power up the short circuits and cause the damage. Leaving the battery in for only a minute may be enough time to fcuk something.
Ok preparing
Disassemble the phone as much as possible, the more the quicker it will dry. If the water was salty or dirty , wash them under the tap trying to get into everything.( I am serious)
To dry(cook
Test you oven temp is accurate from 40c to 50c with temperature probe. Set temperature to 40c to be safe, 50c if your in a hurry, 45c would be safe, but it's an oven it may randomly jump up 10c??? hence 40 is safe. Around 50-60 some plastics start to deform, ( this I have learnt first hand).
OK spread the parts out on clean metal is best or ceramic plate/s and place the plates in the oven.
Drying time. Depends on the parts and how big they are and if water could be trapped in them.
Bare, open parts, no touching surfaces, keyboards can be pricks. 2-4hours at 50-40c.
Touching parts but nothing complex, i.e. no water stuck between the keyboard parts. 6-9 hours.
Whole phone 1-2 days.
Thanks for all the tips guys. It's still drying out now in a big bowl of rice. I'm going to try to turn it on again tomorrow. A friend of mine has one too, so if it fails to work I'm going to try his battery to see if that's the problem.
I'm using my N95 now, and it sucks :/
Use DISTILLED water to rinse it out, NOT tap water
IT'S ALIVE!
There is water behind the screen though (or between the casing and the screen). Do you think that'll just dry out over time, or do I need to take it apart to wipe it off?
What's up guys, I recently dropped my G2 in a puddle of water,
I was wondering if it was a good idea to get it fixed by HTC or if you guys have any other recommendations of G2 repair companies?
You should have taken the battery out ASAP and then just leave it out and unplugged overnight. It will be fine.
I did take the battery out, but the LCD has a greenish hue, the wifi is unresponsive, and the haptic feedback is off. Does this mean I need to get all of these components in order for it to work?
Take the battery out and put it in a tub of rice.
Sent from my HTC Vision using XDA App
If it was already submerged completely and the tub of rice doesn't work, one more last ditch thing you can try is to submerge and rinse it out in a bucket of CLEAN (ideally distilled, at a minimum filtered) water.
If there were minerals (or other contaminants) in the water/liquid it was submerged in they could still be on the circuit board, the clean water might just clean it off.
Of course after you try this you need to let it dry for at least 24 hours then submerge it in rice for another 24 hours.
(The rice will absorb the water)
My boss once dropped his blackberry in a toilet and used this method, he did not use rice though, tried it after a day of drying and it didn't work, tried it again 24 hours later and it still didn't work but on the 3rd day the device came back to life so he called it the "JesusBerry" for the next ~year until he upgraded.
BTW you are probably screwed, so don't get your hopes up.
Yeah, ideally you should let that thing dry out for more than 3 days. I know we all "need" our phones, but if you want it to work properly, you're just going to have to wait. I dropped my BB in the toilet, took the battery out, rinsed it, and let it sit. I was impatient and tried to use it the next day - it was all messed up. Three days later, it started to function, but there were a lot of glitches - and I mean a lot. Not until a couple of weeks was it functioning as it should. If you are under warrantee from HTC or have phone insurance, I suggest you just send it in.
You should have left the bb in the toilet where it belongs.
Sent from my HTC Vision using XDA Premium App
Utorrent76 said:
You should have left the bb in the toilet where it belongs.
Sent from my HTC Vision using XDA Premium App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey now, that was a low blow =P Former Berry Addict myself turned Android Addict =D
Like others have said, patience is key. The last thing you want to do with a wet device is try to run power through it. Take the battery out, let it sit in a warm, dry place for a day or two, then transfer into some rice and see what happens on day 3 or 4. You may still be out of luck, but worth a try.
I had an old Sony Ericcson dumb-phone years ago that I took on a long bike ride on a hot summer day in my rear jersey pocket. After 4 hours of riding and soaking in my sweat it was toast. Used that method and in 3 days it was alive and kicking again =D
Good luck! Maybe you'll end up with a Jesus-Z =P
Me too.
gbarayah said:
Hey now, that was a low blow =P Former Berry Addict myself turned Android Addict =D
Like others have said, patience is key. The last thing you want to do with a wet device is try to run power through it. Take the battery out, let it sit in a warm, dry place for a day or two, then transfer into some rice and see what happens on day 3 or 4. You may still be out of luck, but worth a try.
I had an old Sony Ericcson dumb-phone years ago that I took on a long bike ride on a hot summer day in my rear jersey pocket. After 4 hours of riding and soaking in my sweat it was toast. Used that method and in 3 days it was alive and kicking again =D
Good luck! Maybe you'll end up with a Jesus-Z =P
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm also coming from a bb phone. That thing was a pain in my balls. Constantly freezing up,not enough memory,took centuries for the thing to boot up & the list goes on & on. Not that I'm bitter about it or anything,just saying.It had it's problems. Sorry if I offended anyone.
Everyone can hate on blackberries but one thing is for sure: they have kick ass battery life.
And that's the only reason why I would get a blackberry. Especially for those camping trips without electricity..
Sent from my Liquid Metal using XDA App
raitchison said:
If it was already submerged completely and the tub of rice doesn't work, one more last ditch thing you can try is to submerge and rinse it out in a bucket of CLEAN (ideally distilled, at a minimum filtered) water.
If there were minerals (or other contaminants) in the water/liquid it was submerged in they could still be on the circuit board, the clean water might just clean it off.
Of course after you try this you need to let it dry for at least 24 hours then submerge it in rice for another 24 hours.
(The rice will absorb the water)
My boss once dropped his blackberry in a toilet and used this method, he did not use rice though, tried it after a day of drying and it didn't work, tried it again 24 hours later and it still didn't work but on the 3rd day the device came back to life so he called it the "JesusBerry" for the next ~year until he upgraded.
BTW you are probably screwed, so don't get your hopes up.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah I do see myself paying money (smh) in the near future to get this phone fixed, I guess my best bet is to find a bricked G2 and use it for its parts.
Yeah the methods worked but I am still having problems with the wifi and the screen is ugly. The LCD is green but as a phone it works, I might have to buy a bricked G2. Anybody knows who have a bricked G2?
Sent from my HTC HD2 using XDA App
Utorrent76 said:
You should have left the bb in the toilet where it belongs.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well this was ~10 years ago and at the time a BlackBerry (957) was the greatest thing since sliced bread.
this is a horrible day for g2 users....R.I.P lmao
Yeah, the BB was a pain in my ass too, but whoever said the battery life was awesome is right. I didnt have a data plan with it, so I never used it to its capacity. Also, If you'd like your personal info synced to your computer only and not Google, then the BB is where it's at. But anyways, did this guy ever ay what he did with the phone?
I resently had my phone dropped in water. My screen seemed a bit off in color. I removed the battery and placed the phone on top if my cable box for a day and it was fine after that.
Sent from my HTC Vision using XDA App
Ugh, sorry to resurrect this thread, but did that fix it for you? My g2 decided to take a bath in the toilet and the very first thing I did was take the battery out, dry it off with toilet paper as thoroughly as possible (including the sim card, memory and headphone jack slots) prop it with with the keyboard apart and on its side to maximize airflow in front of a fan. I'm going to go to sleep with it like this and hopefully it will turn on tomorrow....
Aha... After my first phone fell in some water, I never ever brought it near anything that could be damaged by water. Lol an advice, don't ever bring your phone when your using the bathroom... leave it on the bed. So yea I paid a lot for my G2 and don't want it f**ked up you know.
Sent from my Vision using XDA Premium App
lainvalenajr said:
Aha... After my first phone fell in some water, I never ever brought it near anything that could be damaged by water. Lol an advice, don't ever bring your phone when your using the bathroom... leave it on the bed. So yea I paid a lot for my G2 and don't want it f**ked up you know.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Geez, that do you do with your time when you're sitting on the toilet?
My wife dropped my galaxy nexus in a bucket of water. So I pulled out the battery and they both sat for about 20 minutes separate, then I powered it back and it gives the usual screen of "I just got dunked!" and isn't working correctly.
Apparently, Verizon never added insurance to my phone when I signed up for it when I got it.
Thoughts on what to do???
How long ago did you buy the phone because you still might have time to buy a warrenty.. put your phone in rice for 24 hours.. not sure if it should be cooked or not so Google it... I'm sorry for your lose and everyone here at XDA forums wish you the best of luck.. the galaxy nexus is a fighter!
Remove the battery and store the phone in a container with lots of rice for a few days. It is a long shot but I have saved a few devices in this manner. The damage may already be done since you tried to power it on.
Something else to do is rinse the phone thoroughly with distilled water before putting it in the rice. This may get rid of any residue left over from the water in the bucket.
Claim on the house insurance? Ive never made a claim before but thats what its there for.
You should put your phone in a convection oven at 50-60 degrees centigrade for like 24 hours.
The battery should NOT be put in there!
One should never try to power it back on after 20 minutes.
This won't help you now, but as others said, after dropping into water DO NOT turn the phone on without letting it sit in a bag of rice for two days MINIMUM>
Wow, sorry about that. You did the right thing by pulling the battery. I really don't understand why you powered it up so soon though, did you think it would dry out in 20 minutes?
Jackpot! Just added total coverage insurance Had 9 days left.
Should I go ahead and make my claim? Or wait a day or two?
And I rooted and unlocked my phone, and since I cannot restore it back to stock, should I report it as lost or will it not matter?
Uncooked rice. For a couple days.. maybe you'll get lucky
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
It's not that difficult to get a new one. You can usually find suitable replacements in bars or on dating sites, especially if you've got money. Look for a model that doesn't drop your calls (in water).
markyb said:
Jackpot! Just added total coverage insurance Had 9 days left.
Should I go ahead and make my claim? Or wait a day or two?
And I rooted and unlocked my phone, and since I cannot restore it back to stock, should I report it as lost or will it not matter?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wait a few days.. and probably file a lost claim though you might have to file a police report for that.
xaronax said:
It's not that difficult to get a new one. You can usually find suitable replacements in bars or on dating sites, especially if you've got money. Look for a model that doesn't drop your calls (in water).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok, THAT is funny... and very true, he may need to make that change
As far as the unlocked rooted thing, i don't think it matters at this point. If you are getting it replaced anyway, just totally kill it so it doesn't turn on. who's to know.
Seriously, put the phone in a ziplock bag with UNCOOKED rice for at LEAST 24 hours.
It will absorb all of the moisture out of the phone. Don't be stupid and try to turn it on or plug it in before 24 hours or you risk frying it.
The battery will most likely be fully depleted also. But take it slow. The phone will also still be a little "wonky" even after a few days.
Be careful with the rice too. I usually fill the bag up half way and lay it on a counter... gently placing the phone on top. Last thing you want is rice dust lodged in your buttons (ie Don't shake the bag)
I've done this a few times. Once in the toilet (before use), my kid threw my phone in the tub while I was showering, and my gf dropped her in a puddle.
All were recovered fully.
You have to watch out for water damage with the stickers unless you have full coverage. Theft and loss are two different things. I don't know if you'd need a police report if you just "lost" it. Maybe you were on a Ski Lift and fumbled it into the woods below. Perhaps since we don't have an official 3-Pin Car Holder, the phone slid and fell out the window. I don't think any of those would require a police report.
The window excuse gives you reason to stress test the screen with your car.
Rice thing worked for my wife once on her env3...second time she had it in the washing machine and it left lines on the screen...so rice didnt work on that occasion...luckily when youre best friends with a verizon store manager they can make your life much easier.
You do know that making a claim on your insurance at this point is basically just petty theft?
Another thing to know is to dunk in rubbing alcohol before you let it dry out. The alcohol will actually displace any water still left in the phone (as much as possible) and then you can put it in rice.
When you place the phone in rice, I wouldn't seal the container unless you live in swampy super humid environment. Sealing it traps moisture and ensures the only place the water can go is the rice. That's not the objective. The goal is to draw moisture out of the phone. It doesn't matter if it goes into the air or the rice.
The alcohol option makes since as it evaporates more quickly. But I'd only do that immediately after it happened like the poster stated.
Lastly, swap it out at any time. They don't care because ultimately it will end up in a he said she said ordeal. They will just end up insuring it any how. I've actually had a repair facility add insurance to my account so they can work on my device. The key is being in that window that you can purchase it.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk
i once washed my ipod in the washer. it came out, was still on, i turned it off and kept it in rice for 2 days. then it wouldnt power on. i left it in the toaster oven on 165 for a couple of days. still no go and pc doesnt even detect a usb device. after 2 weeks i thought id turn it on.. and it still doesnt. but before i threw it out, i decided to connect it to the usb, and bam! red charging battery. it works perfectly fine now.
Well, apparently my insurance didn't go through yet and my claim didn't work. Took advice from a friend who works at verizon and I hope I can still do the claim again.
My phone is sitting in rice.. hoping it works.
A little late, but I saw an article on life hacker today about a product designed especially for drying wet portable electronics. Fairly reasonable price swell.
Edit:
I lied. Here: http://venturebeat.com/2012/01/06/dropped-your-phone-in-the-toilet-use-bheestie-to-fix-it
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
Hi
I dropped my phone in a sink filled with tap water. It was dark and I didn't realize my phone was missing for around 15 minutes.
I removed the battery and did not turn it on. I have left it submerged in a container filled with rice and silica gel packets. I have left the container inside a car parked outside under the hot sun. I did not want to risk it leaving in the conventional oven on low heat as suggested by some forums. Any other solution to this?
Unfortunately, my Samsung Galaxy S2 Skyrocket upgraded phone was stolen from my purse within a month of buying it. I purchased the Nexus full price contract free. I cannot buy a new one now and I am desperate for this one to work.
Please can you give more suggestions as to how to get it started? I will not turn it on for another 3-4 days. But any additional help is welcome. How expensive would a professional phone repair take?
just leave it in the rice and silica for a couple days. thats your best chance.
as stated, leave it for several days. a repair could cost any range of price depending on damage. id personally change out the rice every day
It might be too late but immediately take battery out, leave it in zip lock bag in rice as others suggested, in cool area for 1-3 days.
I had similar situation as yours (bought it full price from overseas before Google started selling it, and then it got wet with Shamu in Sea World splashing salt water on it, the phone was gone after it.
I learned the procedure the hard way after that phone was unusable and since then successfully used it on newly bought GN and on son's Vibrant after being drenched in thunderstorms.
If you're technologically inclined, or have a friend or two that are, get them to take the phone apart and let it air dry for about a week. Phones are simple, find the screws, take em out, safely pry the phone apart, carefully separate any ribbon cables from the PCB and tinker with it.
Not making any promises, but these phones are tougher than you think.
Waaaaay back when my hubby left his Droid Eris in his pants it went in the washer...
A full wash cycle later and a weird clunking noise when I turned on the dryer prompted me to check and to my horror there was his brand new phone (maybe 8 weeks old at that point).
Did the same you did, took the battery out and let it soak in rice for a few days. At first it would not turn on with the original battery, but eventually I tried that one again and it worked! There were a few waterspots under the screen, but they went away and it kept working flawlessly for him for almost two years till he retired it.
Wishing you all the best!
If the water had anything besides just water in it you will also want to take apart the phone after it has dried and clean the ports and connections with rubbing alcohol at least 95%, using a qtip this will help to prevent/stop erosion
Thank you
Thank you all for your suggestions. After leaving the phone in rice and silica packets for 2 days I dismantled the phone and let it dry further. I am not confident that I will be able to do the alcohol cleaning required to prevent water erosion/corrosion.
I am going to put the phone together and turn on the phone today. It has been 4 complete days and I hope it is not too early.
Fingers crossed and hoping for a miracle. :fingers-crossed:
Will keep you'll posted with what happens.
Thank you!!
NamZee said:
Thank you all for your suggestions. After leaving the phone in rice and silica packets for 2 days I dismantled the phone and let it dry further. I am not confident that I will be able to do the alcohol cleaning required to prevent water erosion/corrosion.
I am going to put the phone together and turn on the phone today. It has been 4 complete days and I hope it is not too early.
Fingers crossed and hoping for a miracle. :fingers-crossed:
Will keep you'll posted with what happens.
Thank you!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You've already done what I would have done. The best thing to do now is to be patient and do not try to put the battery back in too soon. Don't rush the drying by heating the phone. It's probably better to throw the battery out, I wouldn't trust any battery that has been submerged for so long. That said, 15 minutes is quite a long time. You could get lucky, but I would prepare myself for some bad news.
Phone Working
Thank you immensely for all you suggestions!! My phone works...There were a couple of things not working initially. Like the volume button display was not moving when I reduced the volume or increased it. The volume was changing but not the volume status bar.
Anyway, now, after 2 days, that is working too. Everything is working fine. Thank you all for your patience and consolation. Appreciate all your help. :victory:
After 15 minutes in water that is seriously impressive! Any screen damage?
Put in front of fan or can also pour/soak in at least 99% isopropyl alcohol that find in electronics section. Will evaporate the water. Its what is used to clean motherboards and stuff.
*This Jedi master be a Ninj-ESS*
NamZee said:
Thank you immensely for all you suggestions!! My phone works...There were a couple of things not working initially. Like the volume button display was not moving when I reduced the volume or increased it. The volume was changing but not the volume status bar.
Anyway, now, after 2 days, that is working too. Everything is working fine. Thank you all for your patience and consolation. Appreciate all your help. :victory:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good for you. You are really lucky.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
Glad everything worked out!
Samsung galaxy nexus contact cleaning
shreddintyres said:
If the water had anything besides just water in it you will also want to take apart the phone after it has dried and clean the ports and connections with rubbing alcohol at least 95%, using a qtip this will help to prevent/stop erosion
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Where are all the contacts? - do you mean where the ribbons connect? I dropped minebriefly (10sec) in an outdoor swimming pool - probably some chlorine in water. I don't know where all the contacts are...
Thanks!
For any doubters, here's a story. My Captivate Glide decided to take a little swim in the toilet Friday night (don't ask how or why, because even I don't know), so I dried it off and all the works. I also decided to take part in that rice myth for waterlogged devices. I checked it the next morning, and it still didn't work. So later that afternoon, I was ready to go to the AT&T store and make an insurance claim, and to my extreme delight and surprise, it turned on. Only a couple keys on the keyboard are sticky, but I don't use the keyboard nearly enough to justify a $125 deductible.
So moral of the story is that
A.) the rice myth works
and
B.) the Captivate Glide is one resilient phone!
Keys are sticky? Try wiping them down with lens cleaner ive done that for sticky keys
Sent from my SGH-I927 using xda premium
Rice always works butbu need to give it more then one day usally then would boot prlly weird the first time cause might still be moisture on th board the steams off. Even if the keys were "sticky" they would eventually get back t proper working condition.. I took a dive with mine in my pocket down 10 ft of water so
phatryan69 said:
Rice always works butbu need to give it more then one day usally then would boot prlly weird the first time cause might still be moisture on th board the steams off. Even if the keys were "sticky" they would eventually get back t proper working condition.. I took a dive with mine in my pocket down 10 ft of water so
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hopefully, at least, you took a picture with it, while you were down there.
(Before it died, that is. And auto-saved to sd card, of course.)
From speaking with people who specialize in remediating electronic devices (smoke, water), it seems the single most important thing is to get all forms of power away from the thing as soon as possible.
Including what would be the CMOS battery in a computer.
Apparently it's the (micro?) corrosion between power and water that kills it.
If I had done the dive, I'd be freaking out and ripping the case apart to get at any battery. Probably doing the case in in the process, in my panic.
Good to hear you, and yours, survived. One less thing to live down (if you're married)?
-----
Rice thing? Pack a dunked device in a bag of rice and leave it for a couple of days? Perhaps with a good fan going nearby? (When my basement flooded, even though only a couple of inches deep, they brought in some industrial fans for several days. Even if the water seems gone, the humidity is still way high, and that's gotta come down, too.)