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So I did a pretty stupid thing yesterday and decided to pull out my G1 while it was raining cats and dogs. At first it did not want to start up at all but I let it just sit for a few hours. Now it starts up but I cannot get into recovery.(hold home+power) It just stay on the T-Mobile G1 screen and does nothing. I also tired flashing the recovery image again and nothing. One more important thing when I connect my USB cable it does not give my the option to mount my SD Card. It only charges the G1.
Thank you in advance for helping.
I'm not sure why exposing it to rain would merit flashing the recovery image.
It might be too late, but you might try putting it in a bag of rice over night to pull all the moisture out.
xelaboy said:
I'm not sure why exposing it to rain would merit flashing the recovery image.
It might be too late, but you might try putting it in a bag of rice over night to pull all the moisture out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
+1 on the rice. take the battery out first.
Thanks for the idea. I let it sit over night and gave it a full charge. Everything works fine but I still can't boot into recovery. I tired flashing the latest recovery through terminal emulate and also through the Cayongan reboot but still no luck. I'm suck on CM 5.0.7 Test 3 and my battery is dying way to quickly.
This sucks @ss! I went to T-mobile to look for a replacement phone but T-mobile has some crappy @ss Adnroid phones. I didn't want to go through google to get a Nexus One.
THANKS AGAIN GUYS!
Whenever you get a phone or other piece of technology wet, the last thing you want to do it try to turn it on while its still wet. You might end up frying something. Next time, stick it in rice for 24 hours before even thinking about trying to put it on, or put it in your oven at about 120 degrees for a few hours to let it dry out.
http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/how-to/tips/4269047
Even if a wet cellphone seems dead, there's a good chance it can be resuscitated. Just make sure you act fast--the longer the water sits inside, the greater the likelihood it will destroy the phone for good.
This is a DIY moment. While consumers are conditioned to send back broken merchandise, your phone's warranty probably doesn't cover water damage. And you may not have much luck pulling a fast one on your phone company--most of today's phones come with a "water sticker" that permanently changes color if it gets wet.
The first step: Immediately cut the power by removing the battery. I know it's tempting, but resist the urge to power up your phone to see if it works--just turning it on can short out the circuits. If you have a GSM phone (the type used by AT&T and T-Mobile), you'll want to remove the SIM card as well. Even if your phone turns out to be beyond repair, the SIM should retain a lot of its onboard information, such as the contacts in your phone book.
With the battery safely set aside, you now have one goal--dry your phone, and dry it fast. If you let the moisture evaporate naturally, the chance of corrosion damaging the phone's innards increases. Instead, blow or suck the water out. But don't use a hair dryer--its heat can fry your phone's insides. Instead, opt for a can of compressed air, an air compressor set to a low psi or a vacuum cleaner (a wet/dry Shop-Vac would be perfect). The idea is to use air to push or pull moisture out through the same channels it entered.
Finally, use a desiccant to wick away any leftover moisture. The most convenient choice is uncooked rice. Just leave the phone (and its disconnected battery) submerged in a bowl of grains overnight. If you're worried about rice dust getting inside your phone, you can instead use the packets of silica gel that often come stuffed in the pockets of new clothes. But acting fast is far more important than avoiding a little dust, so don't waste time shopping if you don't already have a drawer full of silica gel.
The most important thing to remember is to avoid heat. That means no hair dryers, ovens, microwaves or extended periods in direct sunlight. While heat will certainly evaporate the moisture, it could also warp components and melt adhesives. Those fragile glues are also why you'll want to avoid dunking the phone in rubbing alcohol (an oftÂ*prescribed tip on the Web). Alcohol is a solvent and can dissolve the internal adhesives. (If you drop your phone in the toilet, it's okay to wipe the outside with alcohol to disinfect it.)
One final, perhaps surprising, note: If your phone gets soaked in salt water, you should probably flush the whole thing in fresh water before it dries. When salt water evaporates, it leaves crystals that can damage a phone's fragile components. Just be sure to remove the battery before flooding the device.
PS: I prefer ziplock bags versus a bowl. Also, instead of rice you can use your fridge. The fridge works by sucking moisture out of the air. Or better yet combine both. Place it in a bowl of rice and then in the fridge.
i reccomend restarting back at rc29 if ur in the usa or rc7 if ur in the uk. if u need a for sure how to guide click here
that guide has proven to many users to work flawlessly and save time compared to the old method using telnetd lol
Thanks to everyone. I got it working. I just use ADB to erase and update my recovery image. Then used ADB to boot into recovery and it worked after that.
hey i have an htc dream that was just recently dropped into a cup of malibu. The phone turns on but it has entered safe mode. Well sometimes its in safe mode. i think the power key is messed up cuz it thinks im holding it down and keeps poppin up the phone options. i dont know what to do or if this can be fixed. please help
The best procedure for dealing with phones falling in liquid is to remove the battery immediately and let it dry completely.
What kills phones is not the liquid as such, but trying to use them while still wet, the current supplied by the battery causes what is known as 'dendritic growth' between the end caps and pins of the many surface mount components, and in the process can actually strip the metal off, leaving a greyish fuzzy deposit.
Plain water is actually not that bad, but sugary liquids, such as fruit juices, or carbonated drinks are the worst, followed by alcoholic drinks, beer, coffee, tea, etc.
If you do spill or drop you phone in anything other than water, you may still have problems, since the residues will be water soluble, and even condensation or high humidity may cause issues.
If it was my G1, ( I don't have one, yet...), then I would completely strip it, and wash everything except the lcd screen, in warm soapy water, then rinse in clean cold water, followed by at least 3 hours in an oven at 60-80 degrees Celcius to dry it off.
The above procedure may save your phone, but it's not a task for anyone not used to disassembling phones, be aware that it will void any warranty you have, and that it is possible to completely kill your phone this way, ( although leaving it with malibu in it will also do that eventually).
I actually read a post, on lifehacker.com I believe, that stated you could submerse the phone into a bowl filled with dry (uncooked) rice... Do not know if it works, but I intend on trying it if my phone decides to take a bath... Could not hurt...
L8r
Open it up, take out the battery and stick it in a bowl of dry rice for a day or so. Don't try to use it while it's wet.
Dry rice will certainly help remove any water, it may leave some water soluble residues, such as sugars etc, which will become 'active' when exposed to a humid atmosphere, the dry rice solution is perfect for water, but may not be as good for other liquids.
Hi guy, jusy now my S Pen accidentally drop into water, now the problem is the S Pen is very sensitive, when my S Pen haven't touch and far betwwen 0.3-0.4mm to the screen, the screen auto detect it and written...it is annoying~
Anyone have great solution to solve it?
Very appreciate your helping as well...
Tq
Sent from my GT-N7000 using XDA Premium App
Let the pen dry fully before using it on your Gnote
Try a hair dryer on low heat. I rescued a phone that had dropped in water that way!
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
be lucky that it wasnt the note itself wait and hope, or you need to buy a new one
leong19921992 said:
Hi guy, jusy now my S Pen accidentally drop into water, now the problem is the S Pen is very sensitive, when my S Pen haven't touch and far betwwen 0.3-0.4mm to the screen, the screen auto detect it and written...it is annoying~
Anyone have great solution to solve it?
Very appreciate your helping as well...
Tq
Sent from my GT-N7000 using XDA Premium App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Grab a container and fill it half way with rice. Dried rice ... then put the pen in the middle of the container and fill it up to the top with dried rice. What happens is dried rice sucks out the moisture out of devices. My buddy fixed his IPhone this way. Hope this helps you. Make sure that the container doesn't have leaks otherwise rice sill absorb moisture out of the air instead of the pen.
Just buy a new one, if can afford to but the Note and Im sure 20 bucks is a bargain.
Colingajewski said:
Try a hair dryer on low heat. I rescued a phone that had dropped in water that way!
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
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Click to collapse
marlip said:
Grab a container and fill it half way with rice. Dried rice ... then put the pen in the middle of the container and fill it up to the top with dried rice. What happens is dried rice sucks out the moisture out of devices. My buddy fixed his IPhone this way. Hope this helps you. Make sure that the container doesn't have leaks otherwise rice sill absorb moisture out of the air instead of the pen.
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Click to collapse
blue ribbon for colin!!! great job and the right thing to do...a fan will work too in some cases...as long as its moving air it evaporates the liquid faster....
not so much for marlip... rice is 100% a myth.... and no i dont care what you have read, its wrong... if the rice is not touching the liquid it is not absorbing it... sure it picks up some evaporation as it evaporates on its own(no help from the rice i will add again) but it is doing nothing but getting rice dust in areas it doesnt need to be in... moving air people.... whether it is warm or just a fan...moving air will evaporate liquid faster than non moving air.... bag of rice =non moving air.... and again if the rice is not touching the liquid it is not absorbing it...just the normal evaporation that would happen in a container without the rice is all that is happening..
not looking for a fight just trying to help people fix things the right way... ive been repair tech for 20+ years and revived thousands of phones and revived thousands that werent revived by rice... so i do have a clue...
btw if itas a phone just drying it wont fix it...there will be corrosion on the board, and like rust corrosion doesnt stop until you stop it...it may work for a while but it will start getting quirky and issues will arise so it needs cleaned and treated too...
I think i will have to agree... Air circulation will help much more than rice. I look back at my first mobile phones and remember how many of them got soaked and i had to unscrew them apart and just leave them in front of my "ULTIMATE HI-POWER USB FAN" live long nokia 3310
So my opinion bro just look for an s-pen dissasembly guide, follow it carefully, leave your s-pen in front of a fan and forget about rice... Just because ur phones made in asia dosent mean the regions main dish will fix its problems... Will be silly if i poured beer over my BMW's scratches to make em dissapear
Good luck with you s-pen mate!!! Hope to see you drawing in no time
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Leong, I posted a long time ago about how to address a water incident. This is the best tried and true method :
If your phone gets dropped in water immediately remove from the water,
Remove the battery as quickly as possible Then
Dry off the best you can, if you can open the unit up (you have the skill to do so then do so)
Then immerse in 91% Iopropol Alcohol (200proof drinking alcohol is actually better but rarely can find reagent grade drinking alcohol)
The reason for doing this 1st is the water molecules bind to the alcohol which immediately limits the potential damage. Then, after a few minutes (3-15 min depending) then dry off with paper towels and q-tips the best you can and then
Either use a fan (hair dryer) on it for a time and then put in rice or Millet and leave for a day or 2. Then use the Hair dryer to blow off any dust. reassemble and test, most the time you will be successful, it all depends how bad the incident was and how fast you got the battery out of the phone.
This is the standard way of addressing a water incident in underwater photography. I have done this personally more times than I want to admit, I do underwater photography and you can imagine the panic you get when your $3000.00 camera /housing starts to get a leak in the ocean @ 90 feet underwater, worst part is salt water destroys the coating on your lenses, which is insult to injury.
Either way the important thing to to be patient and make sure it is totally dry (ergo 1-2 days) Also storing it in the grain is best @ 75-85 deg F doesn't need more heat just higher than the 60's deg
I know everyone always says OMG putting a electronic in Alcohol..... read up on the science/ chemistry... and you will find this is pretty normal thing as long as there is no battery or power source connected to the item.
Hope you fix it
leong19921992 said:
Hi guy, jusy now my S Pen accidentally drop into water, now the problem is the S Pen is very sensitive, when my S Pen haven't touch and far betwwen 0.3-0.4mm to the screen, the screen auto detect it and written...it is annoying~
Anyone have great solution to solve it?
Very appreciate your helping as well...
Tq
Sent from my GT-N7000 using XDA Premium App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can't we all just get along?
There is no constructive purpose for name calling, folks. kawgirlval69 stated in her post that she was not trying to argue with anyone, she was just trying to help. Nobody really cares what will or will not work in theory. As compelling as that science lesson was I always prefer real-world experience to theory.
Last night my SGN went swimming in the hot tub and my daughter told me to burry it in an airtight can of rice (which I did using silicone sealant). By the way, I was thinking the same thing another poster suggested (if only it was only the S-Pen that fell in!)... Anyway I quickly dove in head first after it (forgetting about the wireless headphones that were around my neck) and eventually emerged with the device, although not until after it had sunk all the way to the bottom! Immediately I ripped off the back and pulled the battery, then shook as much water out of all the ports as I could. I used a hand dryer for once over but knew that wouldn't help with any of the water deep inside the device so I took my daughter's advice and buried it inside a sealed can of rice for 18 hours. I would have disassembled the device immediately but I had time constraints due to work obligations so I hoped that the rice would do it's job.
The first chance I got this afternoon I pulled my phone out of the rice and took it apart. There was water EVERYWHERE inside -- big puddles in every nook and cranny! In fairness I can't say if there would have been more or less water at that point without the rice, but that is all academic considering the fact that leaving ANY standing water on electronic components for that much time is a bad idea due to the corrosion factor that another poster mentioned, corrosion I noticed already developing on a few metal brackets and such.
After complete disassembly and thorough drying (with said hand dryer) of each individual part I cleaned the slightly corroded areas and put the device back together. I fired it up no more than an hour ago and so far everything seems to work fine.
As for the S-pen, if there's a way to disassemble it and thoroughly dry it by hand I would do that, or just wait for it to dry on its own which may take several days. As yet another poster suggested it might be worth it just to buy a new one if you can't get that one working... and just be glad it wasn't your phone you dunked!
Oh, and if any are curious, I may have saved my phone but my wireless headphones didn't make it (sniff).
[edit] Apparently the name-calling post was removed? Anyway I appreciate Oka1's reply -- I didn't even think about using alcohol but that's actually a great idea! A bit too late for me now but I'll have to remember that for next time.
@ oka... good way to do it... just a tip from experience.. you dont need the millet or rice after... air dry or fan or etc... overnite will evaporate everything doing things as you described... just saving a step....
@ajax... thank you for actually reading what i wrote.. thanks for having my back...
kawgirlval69 said:
blue ribbon for colin!!! great job and the right thing to do...a fan will work too in some cases...as long as its moving air it evaporates the liquid faster....
not so much for marlip... rice is 100% a myth.... and no i dont care what you have read, its wrong... if the rice is not touching the liquid it is not absorbing it... sure it picks up some evaporation as it evaporates on its own(no help from the rice i will add again) but it is doing nothing but getting rice dust in areas it doesnt need to be in... moving air people.... whether it is warm or just a fan...moving air will evaporate liquid faster than non moving air.... bag of rice =non moving air.... and again if the rice is not touching the liquid it is not absorbing it...just the normal evaporation that would happen in a container without the rice is all that is happening..
not looking for a fight just trying to help people fix things the right way... ive been repair tech for 20+ years and revived thousands of phones and revived thousands that werent revived by rice... so i do have a clue...
btw if itas a phone just drying it wont fix it...there will be corrosion on the board, and like rust corrosion doesnt stop until you stop it...it may work for a while but it will start getting quirky and issues will arise so it needs cleaned and treated too...
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Click to collapse
I know that this thread is a little long in the tooth, but I thought I might add this: a mom and pop company called CPR+ (cell phone rescue) uses the following protocol to repair water damaged phones:
1: Place the phone in a hermetically sealed container with long grain brown rice: the atmospherics inside will naturally pull moisture from the device into the drier air in the container.
2: Replace corroded parts and hip joints on the logic board, and glue.
The rice doesn't work because its rice...it works only when placed in a sealed container by transferring moisture from the device to the air in the container. The rice is there to absorb water from the atmosphere...not the device directly. A zip local bag will work too.
A friend of mine is a son of the family who owned the store. He also made a living for two years buying water damaged iPhones and reselling them after using the rice method.
I've saved two of my phones, my fathers phone, and my cousins Droid this way. So far I'm 4-0. Three out of four of those devices, others tried using a hair dryer, a fan, and just leaving them out for 3 days-- 7 in the case of my dads Motorola Tundra. The Tundra wound up with a seeping battery after a hair dryer was brought to it. In most cases I'd just buy a new battery, regardless.
3 days in a zip lock bag--untouched for the whole period, ressurected one phone after the first try, and the other 3 phones after other methods were tried.
As good as anecdotal evidence gets without a double blind test, dontcha think?
The pens are actually very resilient. I had an accident involving my pen and the toilet (don't ask), by necessity I immersed the whole pen in a cup full of regular alcohol, wrapped it in a tissue paper for a while to let it dry, and it works just fine. I had to immerse it several times in alcohol before I felt somewhat comfortable with using it again.
I left my wife's iPhone in a bag of rice on a mildly warm radiator for 2 days. It worked.
However, using a hairdryer seems to make a lot of sense. You want to get rid of the water asap. Not leave it slowly evaporate like I did.
Sent from my GT-N7000 using Tapatalk 2
Just buy a new one buddys
I droped an old nokia in water once.
i followed the same procedure of immidiately removing from water and removing the battery as soon as i could.
Then I just took the entire thing apart and wiped it clean with tissues. Then i just kept it in the sum for abot 15 mins (depends on how strong the sun is). once every thing was dry and seems to be properly cleaned. I just took some rubbing alcohol and cleaned it once again. Dats it.
Assembled every thing and voila!! :fingers-crossed: every thing worked. Not sure how advisable it is to keep electronic components in the sun, but it worked well for me.
---------- Post added at 11:02 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:31 PM ----------
Hope this helps someone in need :fingers-crossed:
Well, the S-pen from my Note 10.1 in 2014 not only fell in the water, as it was washed along with clothing. Once you find it inside the machine, to shake to get the water with soap and became a wash in running water. After this, I used a blow dryer for a few minutes and let her into the compartment in the Note for 2 days. After this, the pen started functioning normally ... would be lucky? rs
leong19921992 said:
Hi guy, jusy now my S Pen accidentally drop into water, now the problem is the S Pen is very sensitive, when my S Pen haven't touch and far betwwen 0.3-0.4mm to the screen, the screen auto detect it and written...it is annoying~
Anyone have great solution to solve it?
Very appreciate your helping as well...
Tq
Sent from my GT-N7000 using XDA Premium App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am your first thanker. However, that is weird.
I think that the water causes a short circuit in the pen which lets it think that there is pressure.
Hey guys, two days ago I was using my s4 Active on the bathtub to test the Aqua mode on the camera. After that when I tried to charge it it wouldn't charge. I've been using different batteries and an external charger to keep it running before going to my provider and check if the warranty will cover it.
Yesterday I read that alcohol may work to fix water damage, so I poured some 80% rubbing alcohol onto the usb port and basically the entire back of the phone. I let it dry in the sun for about 20 minutes and when I turned it on the screen was completely ****ed up, there are like blubs under it, as if the alcohol got under the screen, i can barely see it and now the touch capability won't work. Is there any way to fix this or is my phone lost?
nachochaves said:
Hey guys, two days ago I was using my s4 Active on the bathtub to test the Aqua mode on the camera. After that when I tried to charge it it wouldn't charge. I've been using different batteries and an external charger to keep it running before going to my provider and check if the warranty will cover it.
Yesterday I read that alcohol may work to fix water damage, so I poured some 80% rubbing alcohol onto the usb port and basically the entire back of the phone. I let it dry in the sun for about 20 minutes and when I turned it on the screen was completely ****ed up, there are like blubs under it, as if the alcohol got under the screen, i can barely see it and now the touch capability won't work. Is there any way to fix this or is my phone lost?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You did what? I....I just..........just send it in for warranty replacement, say it is water damaged, and leave it at that.
By chance, did you leave the battery in it when you did this? If so, take Devo's advice and pray for the best because that's your only hope. ANY liquid inside a phone with a battery in it will short things out. Even with the battery removed there are still capacitors inside that hold small amounts of electricity for a period that could be damaged by liquid. Not a very good idea.
Hi guys
My phone was dropped in the water. I gave time to it and make it dry by hairdryer and put it in rice to absorb its humidity. Then I opened the back panel and made it drier. INow when I press the power button nothing happened. Just when I connect it to the charger, the charging logo and then start screen appear and shows 1 percent charge, is charging and then disappear. it repeats without starting normally. What is your remarks folks?
Something is shorted, just send it to someone to fix it and tell them it's water damage.
Disconnect the battery immediately.
Rice does nothing.
Get some anhydrous (99%) isopropyl alcohol* and liberally flush the entire phone with it to absorb the moisture.
Use low pressure compressed dry oil free air to blow out as much of the alcohol as possible.
Do it in a dry room and it is flammable.
After you get it as dry as possible allow to dry in a warm, dry room with a fan on it.
Let it rest for at least several days.
Reconnect the battery and see what you got.
* never use isopropyl alcohol or any solvent around an LCD display, it will poison it. Should be safe for AMOLED displays. Try to prevent it from getting in between the display and the glass if that can happen.
Use your best judgement.
The more you can safely disassemble it before flushing it out the better. Be aware that individual assemblies like the display and mobo are sensitive to ESD damage when out of circuit.
In a dry room handling them is risky if you disconnect the ribbon cables. Unfortunately this is exactly where water tends to get trapped.
If you disassemble to subassemblies level raise humidity in the room to 50% and use a plain wood surface, or earth grounded ESD mat to work on. A ESD wrist strap is highly recommended.
It may be best not to remove the ribbon connectors other than the battery, flush it well, and allow more drying time.
Either way you want to dry the assembly in a warm dry remove to remove all residual moisture; it must be completely dry before powering up again.
If any corrosion formed as a result of the water exposure especially with the battery connected it will not be salvageable.
Lol, that sounds more complicated than having a heart transplant.
vuittion said:
Lol, that sounds more complicated than having a heart transplant.
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Click to collapse
Well once you get a device wet, speed and appropriate actions make the difference between a paper wieght and a working device.
At least I gave known good advice*. Manufacturers won't even attempt to salvage them because experience has shown it's not worth it.
*dropped my Buds case in a full coffee cup (cream/sugar). Immediately pulled it out and apart. Flushed first with RO water to dissolve any sugar then flushed with anhydrous isopropyl.
A day later it was charging again. 2 years later it still works. And that was with the battery in it.
The coffee was still drinkable too