Ramblings of an old Doc
Published on March 28, 2014 By DrJBHL In Personal Computing

 

It happens to everyone (or almost everyone). Your phone/tablet gets submerged, or a significant amount of water lands on it. There are water proof phones and cases, but you don’t have one…

Step One:

Turn it off ASAP!

Don’t argue. Don’t think. Just do it as fast as you can. You don’t want anything to short out.

Step Two:

Open the battery compartment. Take out the battery and SIM card. Mop up whatever water/fluid you can get to (use a Q-tip for any tiny recesses). That means ports, speakers and microphones. Wrap it in a lint free towel until you can get home to do step three.

Step three:

Put it in a sealed container with a bunch of dry silica gel packets (they come in shoes, and in some beef jerky packages also with electronic stuff you might still have the boxes for). They can also be obtained (ahead of need) from Amazon and Staples. If they’ve been lying around in unsealed containers, heat them in a microwave or with a hair drier BEFORE putting them in with the phone/tablet to dry them out, even if they don’t seem wet.

Step four:

Leave the phone/tablet in the sealed container with the silica gel packets for no less than 72 hours. Deal with your withdrawal however you must…but 72 hours means just that. If you have the urge to pray, it can’t hurt but I can’t say it’ll help.

Good luck…this isn’t a guarantee, just the best method available. Forget rice, etc. DO NOT use a hair drier on the phone/tablet.

Another scenario? Buy a water proof cover.

By the way, all the phone manufacturers put immersion tabs in their phones, so if you don't have insurance that covers that...

 

Source:

http://www.cnet.com/how-to/how-to-dry-out-wet-phone-tablet/?tag=nl.e214&s_cid=e214&ttag=e214&ftag=CAD3c77551

 


Comments (Page 1)
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on Mar 28, 2014

I've heard otherwise directly from a repair/tech guy.
If you drop your phone in water it is vital that it stays wet, otherwise the drying process will leave some kind of residue (can't remember which one he mentioned) which makes it impossible to rescue the device without replaceing hardware.

on Mar 28, 2014

My wife dropped her phone in the dishwasher without noticing and turned on the machine. she noticed it when she emptied the machine later (long program with drying at the end).

 

I'm gonna guess that the device is frakked.

on Mar 28, 2014

Snowy...everyone I've ever spoken with (including tech folks) said, "Turn it off, immediately! If it's off, it can't short out."

As for residue? If it's syrup (coke or the like) not good. There's no real way to get it out. Also, if it's the toilet...I'd say get a new phone since it's gonna turn out "crappy" no matter what (and the germs? yuck).

Salt water, etc.? You can try rinsing with increasing pure alcohol concentrations...no real, reliable help out there, but I'd plan on a new phone. You can let your best repair guy play with it...probably it's a loss, though.

on Mar 28, 2014

Main issue with keeping it wet so as to do a slow dry....is if it's on...aka current/shorting/etc.  If there's no battery connected then remaining wet for a length of time isn't going to be an issue.

Slow, 'natural ' drying via silica is the way to go....as like leather boots in front of a fire...NEVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! try speeding the process with heat.

on Mar 28, 2014

Slow, 'natural ' drying via silica is the way to go

I'd definitely mop up any water/liquid I could as silica gel has a limited capacity. 

on Mar 28, 2014

How about putting it in a bowl covered with rice?

on Mar 28, 2014

SJN - That doesn't work...rice isn't hygroscopic enough. Silica gel (when absolutely dry is...

The real problem is that no one has done a really well designed experiment to test. What we're left with is anecdotal reports...

on Mar 28, 2014

Sounds like a good way to go.  i did, 2 years ago, 'save' a cell phone after swimming with it (accidentally) via the open it, disconnect sim/bat wipe out  and fan for 2 days.  It worked.  (Lucky, am I?)  About the residue, it may be the minerals / chemicals in the municipal water.  I note that when I boil a lot of water, i get a residue on the sides of the pot - same for cell?

on Mar 29, 2014

My phone went in water and sand last year. Followed the steps Doc outlined except I used rice instead. Worked like a dream. When you don't have Silica gel Rice will do the job. So far no aftereffects. Nice thread DOC. Useful Info.

on Mar 29, 2014

Just one word. Or more....

 

Liquipel or buy something else than that BS apple phone (like the next sony xperia Z2 or samsung galaxy S5)

on Mar 29, 2014

Thanks, guys.

I suspect that in the cases in which rice worked, the water really didn't get into the device's guts...anyway, thanks for the interest and the tips.

on Mar 29, 2014

DrJBHL
I suspect that in the cases in which rice worked, the water really didn't get into the device's guts...anyway, thanks for the interest and the tips.

For rice to work it MUST be [with the device] sealed in an airtight bag [and raw, naturally]...

on Mar 29, 2014

When it comes to substitutes for Silica gel, if your in the southern states of the USA, try grits instead of rice. They will do a better job since they absorb 3 times as much water than rice does.

It's a regional thing though since I doubt you can buy them anywhere else.

on Mar 29, 2014

"What's a grit?"  

 

on Mar 29, 2014

I'd call BS on you not knowing what a grit is if it wasn't for the JK emotion.  

Now my turn...What's a ute?

 

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