i put it in the water and after one minutes i took it out and push the home button i saw downgrading mode on screen and then i took the battery out and drying the battery.
now my S5 won't work.
i tried some way such push home + up volume + power with each other but didn't work , also push power button for more than 30 seconds yet it didn't work anyway.
i used charger cable on my device nothing happen and when i push the power button it produced some with noise.
i need your help
You most likely have a fake s5. I swim with my s5 and I have absolutely no problems.
Sent from my SM-G900F using XDA Free mobile app
Putting electronics in water isn't a good idea. The S5 is rated as water resistant, not water proof. Great protection against accidental exposure to fresh water. If the battery cover is slightly ajar or anything is loose, water will get in. There is no immunity against doing ill advised and inherently hazardous things.
Anyway. Genuine phone or not, it sounds like the OP got water in his phone. First, take the battery out and do not try to turn it on every so often to impatiently check whether it has recovered. Every time you do, you run a real risk of permanent damage. At the very least, you need allow abundant time for it to dry out, which will be a long time if you don't disassemble it for decent access /airflow /allowance for evaporation.
Also any professional repair would also include, at a minimum, gently scrubbing the electronics with a solvent to remove mineral deposits from the water. It is very common that a phone will have serious issues even after it has 100% dried due to conductive minerals left behind after water exposure.
On the positive side, phones will usually survive water immersion with zero to minimal permanent damage, provided that you resist powering them before they are cleaned and dried. If you are proficient with electronics, give serious consideration to disassembling the phone and cleaning /drying it properly. You would need a heatgun to detach the glued in place screen assembly. Most components are not accessible without this preliminary step.
If disassembling the phone sounds daunting, then you should get a professional repair. But at the very least, allow the phone to dry a considerable time before trying to turn it on again. Impatience may well result in permanent damage. Placing it in a sealed container, with silica gel to remove water vapour would help dry it a lot faster. Rice would be a distant, distant second and considerably less effective approach. Do not put the phone in direct contact with loose rice. Just put the rice in the same container.
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Related
If you ever spill water on your phone- emergency procedures:
*How speedily you do these things vastly affects your devices chances of surviving*
1. Get the battery out of the phone and dry it!
2. Take out the battery cover, SIM card, SD card, and any other removable part and dry them off
3. Dry the phone itself quickly
4. Submerge the mostly dry phone in uncooked, dry rice for as long as possible This works because rice is very absorbent and will suck water out of nooks and crannies in your phone.
To judge the severity of the water damage, look for a white dot near the battery compartment. If the dot is pink or red the damage is severe.
There are no guarantees that your device will survive or function as it used to even if you follow every step perfectly.
I can confirm this method works. I have used it on 15+ water damaged phones and all but 2 have survived. I have rebuilt many water damaged Atrix and these bad boys are tough. Many I recieve damaged still have moisture in them. The battery is the grim reaper for your phone when it has gotten wet keep it far away from your phone if you want it to live. Follow the directions as listed above to the letter.
If I might add to this handy "How To"
* Use a salable Tupperware container. Ensure its air tight. This will keep the internal air bone dry and let the rice work its absorption magic.
* At minimum wait 1 week without touching your sealed container. In a more severe case add another week.
* If a failed attempt do not throw your phone away. Its almost always fixable. Seek professional help in identifying the problem. Chances are a few $$ can fix it all.
Hi guess
my phone s4 9500 Water leakage him
when batterie empty , I never did not want to engage in
i watch video in youtube how to fix it and clear the phone but nothing
i buy a VolteMetre Which is used in current measurement
how i can fix it thanx Friend
You have to let it dry for like 2-3 days
i leave him more than one week
nothing
This device is deader than a doornail.
If you absolutely must fix this device, purchase a new motherboard. Otherwise, get a newer device.
friend how i can't get where is the problem
With the exception of distilled water, all water on the planet has chemicals and minerals that are floating about in solution between the water molecules. Depending on the location, some municipalities will chlorniate and flouridate the water; the former to guard against bacterial contamination, the latter to enhance the strength of teeth. In combination with electrical current, the chemicals and minerals corrode metal pins and contacts, either breaking the connection, or causing a bridge between two connections. Eventually the combination of the corrosion and the electrical current will destroy the components, causing the device to die.
If the device was only dipped in water for a few seconds and quickly snatched out, it may be salvageable so long as the battery is pulled quickly and the device buried in something that absorbs water, like rice. If the device is in water for longer than a few seconds or so, then the device is likely dead. In your case, your device is dead, and you should be looking into a newer device.
how i can't test if there a problem in this
fpc connceteur
To be quite blunt, it's up to you if you want to spend the time trying to trace every single component for signs of damage, but you'll be spending a LOT of time doing so. With water damage, every component on the board has either corroded connections or has completely burned out. It's unlikely you'll be able to revive the board, and it's much too labor intensive to make it worthwhile, which is why your only real options are what I gave you in post #4 of the thread.
My nokia 6 phone with cracked screen after being in water - does not charge properly, and problems began from March (when phone accidentally fall in water) to 20 April (when i tried to charge from broken usb cables and the battery capacity fall down to 1500 mAh)
After service center repair (they replaced the broken usb-B port, battery and screen) I tried different USB cables and the problem with charge still exist.
As on screenshot i charge phone from AC adapter, and app showing that it's USB - not AC, charging speed is very slow, but instead of charge it slowly discharges until i connect to computer with only usb cable.
Maybe it's a Android 9 update bug? I going to do factory reset to try to solve this bizarre charge issue but before doing it i decided to ask here for help, maybe problem in charger controller.
Turn it off.
It needs to be dried out asap.
Take the rear cover off and disconnect the battery. If it's not an LCD* display, anhydrous isopropyl alcohol can be used to chase the water.
Apply liberally allowing it to drain off, get it everywhere, dunk it even. Then get as much of the alcohol out as fast as possible.
Low (5-10 psi) pressure oil free air can be used.
Or a fan. In a room with very low humidity allow to completely dry. Isopropyl is hygroscopic so dry air is important.
Reassemble in a room that's RH is 50-80% to help mitigate the risk of ESD damage while handling.
Best to always wear a ESD strap and follow ESD protocols when disassembling a phone.
*never expose a LCD display to solvents or alcohols, they will poison the display!
blackhawk said:
Turn it off.
It needs to be dried out asap.
Take the rear cover off and disconnect the battery. If it's not an LCD* display, anhydrous isopropyl alcohol can be used to chase the water.
Apply liberally allowing it to drain off, get it everywhere, dunk it even. Then get as much of the alcohol out as fast as possible.
Low (5-10 psi) pressure oil free air can be used.
Or a fan. In a room with very low humidity allow to completely dry. Isopropyl is hygroscopic so dry air is important.
Reassemble in a room that's RH is 50-80% to help mitigate the risk of ESD damage while handling.
Best to always wear a ESD strap and follow ESD protocols when disassembling a phone.
*never expose a LCD display to solvents or alcohols, they will poison the display!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I saw a sligtly dark area under left broken display corner on the first day of damage from water (not from alcohol) and i left the phone laying on display, because i was unable to detach the screen, next day I tried to use hairdryer to help to dry and it didn't help, but after two days dark area disappeared. Only after two weeks (when phone refused to charge) i gived the phone to service center. In service center (before they assembled phone) repairman said that new battery could be charged manually but not from USB port because of "falling voltage"
nikitam2498 said:
I saw a sligtly dark area under left broken display corner on the first day of damage from water (not from alcohol) and i left the phone laying on display, because i was unable to detach the screen, next day I tried to use hairdryer to help to dry and it didn't help, but after two days dark area disappeared. Only after two weeks (when phone refused to charge) i gived the phone to service center. In service center (before they assembled phone) repairman said that new battery could be charged manually but not from USB port because of "falling voltage"
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That tech was useless.
Can it be fixed, how much?
Most likely not.
Even if "fixed" new damage will likely manifest itself. Any corrosion must be found and removed. This can be a daunting and near impossible task if the water damage is extensive.
You may have damaged/destroyed the c port PCB and/or the mobo, display, ribbon cable contacts, switches etc.
Never power up a water compromised phone. It's imperative to remove battery and all the water asap.
Water is conductive (with readily found contaminants) and corrosive especially with power applied. The corrosion once formed continues to attack the metal unless completely removed. It may take days, weeks or years to cause another failure. Rust never sleeps.
If a ready fix isn't getting it, it's be$t to ditch the device now. Prompt action can save a device.
Any delay can easily total it. If any salt* is present, it's already dead.
2 years ago the case for my Buds went straight to the bottom of a cup of coffee (cream and sugar). I tore the case apart, flushed it with RO water then with anhydrous isopropyl alcohol which I always carry. Dried it for 2 days, disassembled with the battery in it as it was spot welded.
It's still functional today.
It's possible to save a device but it's a very limited window of opportunity in most cases especially if the battery can't be pulled immediately... I got lucky.
*salt ie sweat, sea water is sure death
blackhawk said:
That tech was useless.
Can it be fixed, how much?
Most likely not.
Even if "fixed" new damage will likely manifest itself. Any corrosion must be found and removed. This can be a daunting and near impossible task if the water damage is extensive.
You may have damaged/destroyed the c port PCB and/or the mobo, display, ribbon cable contacts, switches etc.
Never power up a water compromised phone. It's imperative to remove battery and all the water asap.
Water is conductive (with readily found contaminants) and corrosive especially with power applied. The corrosion once formed continues to attack the metal unless completely removed. It may take days, weeks or years to cause another failure. Rust never sleeps.
If a ready fix isn't getting it, it's be$t to ditch the device now. Prompt action can save a device.
Any delay can easily total it. If any salt* is present, it's already dead.
2 years ago the case for my Buds went straight to the bottom of a cup of coffee (cream and sugar). I tore the case apart, flushed it with RO water then with anhydrous isopropyl alcohol which I always carry. Dried it for 2 days, disassembled with the battery in it as it was spot welded.
It's still functional today.
It's possible to save a device but it's a very limited window of opportunity in most cases especially if the battery can't be pulled immediately... I got lucky.
*salt ie sweat, sea water is sure death
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm Sorry that I didn't answer to you almost a year, but you see the little detail on the screenshot, the Charge Speed is 185mA, AND it's very slow. I tested portable charger today and my Nokia is charging VERY SLOW, the InfoApp shows charging speed 300-450 mA with portable charger but when i connect charger to outlet the app shows SLOWER charging speed 10-180mA so i think it refuses to charge from the outlet (glitch)
I saw somewhere on this forum that "i should clear cache partition to clear battery profile cache" but I can't find that message now...
The phone was at service repair in May 2021, they replaced the battery , cracked Corning Gorilla glass, IPS screen and damaged microUSB-B port but the glitch with slow charging did not disappear even after repairs
So i think the factory reset or cleaning the cache partition would resolve the "charging glitch" problem
Hello,
my Redmi Note 7 fell in the water of our harbor and it took ~15min until we were able to find it. The water was ~1 meter deep.
I put the phone in rice for 4 days strait away. At some point the phone started but was discharged the next day. After that the phone did not start or charged anymore but showed a battery symbol.
We took the phone apart and cleaned everything with pure alcohol. We replaced the battery too. I took a few measurements: There is 5V on the battery test point and 4.8 V too.
At some point the phone showed 80% while it was off and attached to a charger today.
At the moment the screen goes on for a very short time ~1-2 sec. when powered on but does not charge when connected to a charger.
What could I do to bring it back to live?
I mean there are working parts in it as it looks like.
It's DOA.
The only way to save it was to pull the battery asap (in salt water even that might not be fast enough), disassemble, flush liberally with warm RO water, flush, flush, then flush with anhydrous isopropyl alcohol to absorb the water, dry for at least 2 days with a fan in a warm room.
Water is the best solvent for brine...
What has happened is water/alcohol insoluble corrosion has formed on contacts and any exposed conductors. BGA chipsets, flat pack ICs, power circuits and PCB traces may be shorted out completely especially V+/ground rails. Once this happens it's beyond salvage... sorry.
You could try a pulling all connectors and dumping the whole lot minus the battery and frame into a mild acid bath for an hour then rinsing throughly with RO water, then isopropyl alcohol, drying etc. Which acid, concentration, and time? Probably very diluted sulphuric acid. It's a mix of copper, silver, tin and more alloys you're trying to clean.
That's the only way to remove the corrosion if present. The acid could easily destroy exposed (no conformal coating) fine pitch PCB traces. As long as any corrosion remains it will continue to corrode.
I don't give it a good chance of working...
Oh man that sounds bad. I thought there would be a chance as it was more sweet water than salt water and the phone worked after the incident for a short time.
muebau said:
Oh man that sounds bad. I thought there would be a chance as it was more sweet water than salt water and the phone worked after the incident for a short time.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Disconnect the battery.
You can try disassembling it again. Pull all ribbon cables and connectors. Place in warm/hot RO water, clean contact surfaces the best you can with a toothbrush or a ultrasonic gum cleaner if you have one. Try to get some water flow under the BGA chipsets.
Replace the RO water at least 2 times and leave in it for a couple hours*.
Inspect contacts, surface mount devices, traces, etc with good light and a optic aid for signs of corrosion damage afterward. If none if seen proceed to the 99% isopropyl alcohol flush and dry completely. It might work....
*water may get in between the display and screen. If so it will leave a residue upon evaporation. This must be purge before reassembly. A vacuum drying chamber can be used. Use your best judgement how the proceed with the washing phase depending on this issue.
If it's sealed, no worries otherwise you may wish to modify the washing phase to be less invasive by limiting time and exposure to the display.
The contacts on the display is what really needs to be cleaned...
Today I found the phone is alive indeed. After lots of cleaning with alcohol it came back to live. Everything work.
The only issue I have is water (or alcohol) in the display now. This causes little clouds of brightness and the many random touch events.
Its there something smart I could do to get rid of this last bit of water except a vacuum chamber. It might vanish if I heat up the phone for several hours near/on the heating with a towel in between (not to hot).
muebau said:
Today I found the phone is alive indeed. After lots of cleaning with alcohol it came back to live. Everything work.
The only issue I have is water (or alcohol) in the display now. This causes little clouds of brightness and the many random touch events.
Its there something smart I could do to get rid of this last bit of water except a vacuum chamber. It might vanish if I heat up the phone for several hours near/on the heating with a towel in between (not to hot).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's never a good idea to clean everything with solvents such as isopropyl. It can weaken many of the adhesives used in electronic devices, and it will ruin your display panel. If you have access to a temperature chamber, you can try removing the battery, putting the device in a bag of rice or desiccant beads, and let it heat soak for about 2 hours at +60c.
Chances are your display and touch panel are ruined, however. NEVER soak a device in alcohol or any other solvent.
Well the alcohol "everywhere" was an accident and bad luck. It happened while I cleaned just the last parts and connections. I will try to remove the battery and put the device with rice somewhere warm with a thermometer to check the temperature.
Thanks for the help. I will report what happens next.
I am able to get the few messages and photos from the day it fell in the water now. So I am near a 100% data (backup from ~2am + current backup) rescued scenario very soon. I am very happy to have reach this point so far anyway.
muebau said:
Well the alcohol "everywhere" was an accident and bad luck. It happened while I cleaned just the last parts and connections. I will try to remove the battery and put the device with rice somewhere warm with a thermometer to check the temperature.
Thanks for the help. I will report what happens next.
I am able to get the few messages and photos from the day it fell in the water now. So I am near a 100% data (backup from ~2am + current backup) rescued scenario very soon. I am very happy to have reach this point so far anyway.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The accident was dropping it in brine water... without through rinsing it be a goner. Even with rinsing it still may eventually die.
Rice does not work. Heat does*.
Be patient.
Warm dry room with fan on it.
The problem now isn't drying but the residue left behind as the water/alcohol evaporates. Try using centrificule force to move the water although capillary may prevent this.
Try drying on end.
Careful use of a shop vac might work in a dust free room but could destroy the display. Use best judgement. At the worst if you just let it dry it probably will leave some water marks, maybe not.
*raise heat to 110-120°F if it's not drying after 2 days. Heat displaces water ie hot boxes used in tropics.
The phone worked perfectly with clouds of water in the display.
After I put the phone in a warm place to get rid of the last few parts of this moisture the screen was black and stayed this way.
Now the lowest part of the phone gets very hot when switched on. Its hot enough to burn your fingers. The funny thing is that with "scrcpy" I am still able to reach the screen and the OS works perfectly as normal. I guess the lower PCB with the USB-C is the part which gets this warm.
I am angry for myself as I could have lived with the few clouds in the display as a reminder to keep water and smartphones away from each other.
Better than broken ribs...
You would need to carefully separate the display from the glass and clean both. Probably bonded with a heat adhesive.
The hot running suggest the phone isn't completely dry or has damage. Pull the connectors off the port pcb and inspect both them and that board for visible corrosion damage.
Reexamine the mobo's power section for same.
It's all probably academic as it likely will fail completely in time. Rust never sleeps.
Ive gotten this tablet wet a few times, (Tab A, T510 2019 10.1) nothing serious, not underwater. this time i had it next to shower, and just got a little water on the screen. I wiped it off and used it for about 1/2 hour, then suddenly the bottom 3rd of the screen pixelated and it flickered. That only lasted a few seconds, then the screen lost some brightness, just looked a little gray.
So i powered it down. Since then, screen is black when it boots, but it does beep with the moisture detected error when I plug in charger. i have been able to power it off and on and get that moisture error, but black screen. when I plug it into PC, i get the Windows code 43 hardware error, device not recognized.
I don't have much hope for it, but thought I'd check here.
Thanks!
Disconnect the battery NOW.
Allow to dry a in warm dry room with a fan on it, with the back panel removed for at least a week.
Disassemble as much as you can easily do to speed drying.
If it's an AMOLED display there's more you can do.
ok, thanks! its TFT-LCD. I already have it apart, and just disconnected battery again. i will put it in a dry upstairs window with plenty of sun.
Raymodjp said:
ok, thanks! its TFT-LCD. I already have it apart, and just disconnected battery again. i will put it in a dry upstairs window with plenty of sun.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Don't fry it... sheild the LCD from direct sunlight by putting it down face first.
Put a fan on it too.
Disconnecting any ribbon cable ends that got exposed may help. However ESD becomes a potential issue as out of circuit components especially the mobo are suspectable to ESD damage.
Because of the LCD you can't use anhydrous isopropyl alcohol as a drying agent; it will poison the display.
You may get lucky particularly if you see no visible corrosion damage on the power sections of the mobo. IP68 means it might resist water, I never trust it. Useful to keep dust out though.
blackhawk said:
Don't fry it... sheild the LCD from direct sunlight by putting it down face first.
Put a fan on it too.
Disconnecting any ribbon cable ends that got exposed may help. However ESD becomes a potential issue as out of circuit components especially the mobo are suspectable to ESD damage.
Because of the LCD you can't use anhydrous isopropyl alcohol as a drying agent; it will poison the display.
You may get lucky particularly if you see no visible corrosion damage on the power sections of the mobo. IP68 means it might resist water, I never trust it. Useful to keep dust out though.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok, thanks again. I have it face down with a fan on it, and i put it in a dry place that doesn't get much direct sunlight.
I really didn't think it got very wet at all. I definitely can't see any corrosion damage. The moisture detection on some Samsungs is very sensitive. Mine even goes off in the summer solely due to high humidity.
Raymodjp said:
ok, thanks again. I have it face down with a fan on it, and i put it in a dry place that doesn't get much direct sunlight.
I really didn't think it got very wet at all. I definitely can't see any corrosion damage. The moisture detection on some Samsungs is very sensitive. Mine even goes off in the summer solely due to high humidity.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You're welcome.
It's safe to put it in sunlight just not with LCD facing it. As long as it's cool enough to touch it won't harm it.
Most at risk are the powerc circuits carrying higher current loads which can accelerate corrosion damage. Or it may simply keep the signal tranfer on data circuits from working with no damage. The faster you pull the battery then dry it, generally the better the outcome.
I dropped my Galaxy Buds case in a cup of coffee (cream&sugar) over 3 years ago. Open it immediately, flushed with RO water, then anhydrous isopropyl alcohol, dried for a day, then drank the coffee. It still works today.