Mon Mar 2, 2009 1:02PM EST
See Comments (182)
I've lost cell phones before. Left on the plane. Foolishly put on top of the car while I was loading stuff in the trunk. But never have I had a phone swallowed by a fish.
The UK's Sun -- sure, not the most erudite paper, but reliable enough on matters of mobile phones swallowed by creatures of the sea -- reports that a local businessman lost his phone a week ago while lounging on the beach. He thought it gone for good, but some time later his girlfriend received a strange call from the phone... from a fisherman who said he'd found the handset in the belly of a 25 pound cod.
After cleaning up and drying out the handset -- a Nokia -- the man says it still works... though it obviously it's now on the smelly side. He is still using it today, although it eventually began acting up and he had to "get the circuit board changed in the end."
What's the takeaway from this fish tale? For starters, some cell phones are a lot tougher than you think. If the seal is good and a lot of moisture stays out of the inside of the case, there's a good chance that a phone will survive a drop in the ocean or a few days in the belly of a cod, at least for a while.
Of course, the second point almost goes without saying: Cod will eat anything.
Dropped your phone in the drink? Here's my handy guide on how to attempt to salvage it.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
BS story. Publicity act IMO. Salt water and electronics don't mix. If it had been fresh-water, it "might" be plausible (I went swimming with a samsung cell phone and it worked for years later, after drying it out), but not into salt water (salt = electrolyte = instant volitile short). If anything, the battery charge would have immediately drained after coming into contact with salt water, even if the circuit board was somehow sealed from the elements.
No such luck for me. Left mine in my pants, and ran them through the laundry. It was as dead as anything I've seen.
Man drops cell phone in sand on beach tide rolls in and fish sees phone light blinking eats phone. Fish gets caught in net gutted phone comes out and works. I have phones that are just about water proof if you have the rubbers all in place that it comes with. So the story is reasonable it could happen. Looks like a Job for Mythbusters!
can we expect to see a bump in nokia's stick price?
Dropped in the water is one thing. But in salt water for a week? Not to mention the cod's stomach acids. This story is total bull.
I went snorkeling in Oahu with my LG cell phone in the pocket of my board shorts. But it was obviously drowned and dead by the time I got back to my beach towel. I didn't tell my wife what had happened. I just said, “honey, we're on vacation right?” We should have left these darn cell phones at home.” Then I threw the dead phone into the ocean as she looked on in disbelief. Minutes later, I fessed up and retrieved the electronic jetsam for proper disposal.
Hi I am an Electronics technician and I personally dropped my pager in the john and cleaned it off and seriously put it in a bag of rice and it worked after that. Here's how this fish story could have possibly happened. most modern devices are sealed togather tighly and are water resistant. but even if they get wet in fresh water as long as it had no power going thru it then there would be nothing to cause a short. what they proably did was either lightly heated it with a hair dryier or let it dry for several days with the battery out it really does work. It is when the device it wet and is turned on that it shorts out and fries. as the myth busters would say plausable
What typo? I can't fined it! lol! not but seriousley
i wonder if it was set to vibrate or what
I have a Nokia phone, which I lost while out walking in the woods. A few months later, a friend found it. Although the phone had been out in the elements for a few months (March/April/May in northern new england), after I charged it, it STILL worked. There was no damage other than some scrapes... the screen, the camera, etc. all work fine! I've been using it for almost two years now.
It's a Nokia a strong phone!!
If the guy lost the phone while it was on then the battery would have eventually died while being in the fish belly. Therefore if the fisherman found the phone then he would have to charge it first in order to turn it on. That part of the story does not make sense to me...
RE: 2 Posted by jedimaster_gary on Mon Mar 2, 2009 3:58PM EST "So if I have this correct the person was just lounging on the beach and a cod WALKED up and ate it, then jumped back in the ocean." Happens to me all the time.
Answering post #2, it's a four-letter word: tide.
Normally if you lost your cell phone, the first thing you do to locate it is dialing the number. I wonder if it rings in the Cod's belly, what will happen? Perhaps it will spit it out and the fishman can get it directly from his net.
New version of fish and (computer) chips. Obviously an act of Cod...
surprised it was not a story from florida. seems like those guys are always finding things when they open up a alligator
nokia phones suck.. lmao, what a marketing ploy seriously, samsung makes the best phones followed by LG. nokia doesnt even come close.
All the fishnets in all of the oceans.........BullS#*t
Please enable your browser's cookies to activate the My Tech column.
| Computers | Home Office | Wi-Fi & Networking | Phones & PDAs | Cameras & Camcorders | TV & Home Theater | Portable Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
66 Posted by djsams12 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:44PM EDT Report Abuse
what idiots. No a fish did not walk up and eat the phone while the guy was lounging on the beach. Maybe when the guy left the beach the phone fell in the sand and when the tide came up the water from the high tide washed the phone out in to the sea. Then a cod saw it and ate it. Nothing fishy shounding here. Weirder things have happened.