How to Revive a Wet Cell Phone

Thu Nov 2, 2006 1:21PM EST

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Sooner or later every cell phone goes in the drink. For some it may be the bathtub, for others a glass of scotch. For many, the toilet. (No need to explain.)

Hey, you spent hundreds of dollars on that handset, so it's understandable that you might decide to attempt to rescue it. But how?

The Cell Freak has all the collected wisdom on the topic, including some advice I'd never heard, like soaking the phone in 95% alcohol to dissolve all the water trapped inside. I've personally had good luck with low-level heat for wet phones and laptops: A few hours on the lowest setting inside an oven (150 degrees or thereabouts) can dry out a gadget and make it good as new.

Regardless of which method you try, remember to remove the battery from any device you attempt to salvage. If this hasn't been made clear by now, batteries are deeply susceptible to damage from heat and foreign substances. They're also relatively easy to replace, so don't even try to save a battery if it's been compromised. However, batteries are by design well-sealed to prevent water or other materials from getting inside, so a quick wipe with a towel should be all you need to save a power cell.

Remember that these methods are not foolproof; in fact, they're far from it. Water and electronics just don't mix. My personal record on saving wet gadgets is about 50-50, but those are pretty good odds in my book, and with this advice, they're even better.

Comments on How to Revive a Wet Cell Phone

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  • 686 Posted by sarah.clrk on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:04PM EDT Report Abuse

    I fell in a creek with my phone and it stills works!

  • 687 Posted by steve_toliver on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:43PM EDT Report Abuse

    I put my cell phone in rice in a plastic container and it sucked out all the moisture after 24 hours. Your welcome.

  • 688 Posted by steve_toliver on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:43PM EDT Report Abuse

    I put my cell phone in rice in a plastic container and it sucked out all the moisture after 24 hours. Your welcome.

  • 689 Posted by musky6911 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    Pull out the battery asap and put phone on a dehumidifier. Works really well!

  • 690 Posted by musky6911 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    Pull out the battery asap and put phone on a dehumidifier. Works really well!

  • 691 Posted by rlbsec@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:43PM EDT Report Abuse

    Put the cell phone in rice in a sealed container. The rice soaks up the moisture.

  • 692 Posted by jeremyliviabills on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:33PM EDT Report Abuse

    I've heard that resting your wet phone in a bowl of rice will absorb all of the mositure from inside the phone.

  • 693 Posted by tlbarnes4444 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:12PM EDT Report Abuse

    Over the weekend I dropped my Samsung in a glass of juice. My previous Samsung I had dropped in the washing machine. After 36 hours in a bowl of dry rice, they both work fine.

  • 694 Posted by davescabs on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:37PM EDT Report Abuse

    for a smartphone like a treo that has a touchscreen , put it in a ziplock bag with about a cup of minute rice. let it set 2-3 days then check to see if the screen is working and is clear of any splotches or blank spots. if not, put it back in the bag a day at a time until it clears up. after its working again, cook the rice and eat it .... recycle

  • 695 Posted by chunkymonkey618 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    I ran my phone through the washer accidentally, and we removed the battery and put it in some rice. After 24 hours, it didn't work, so we put the phone up. After about 2 months, I decided to put the battery back in and plug the phone up, just to see what happened. Guess what? It's alive!

  • 696 Posted by ayuyu2 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:00PM EDT Report Abuse

    I am a fan of the rice method. I washed my blackberry by accident a month ago. When I retrieved it, water was viably sloshing in the screen. I put it in a bowl of rice, and after about 3 days, the visible water was gone. The phone powered up without a problem, but I could still see moisture in the screen. I put it back in the rice for a few more days, and it was good as new. Rice also worked for a cell phone lost in a snow bank for a few days. That phone dried out in 2 days.

  • 697 Posted by massengillj2 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    I was just going to post more of the same of what I just read above. Guess I won't waste the space. It's obvious that you can save a cell phone from a good dunking!

  • 698 Posted by dylan.sheridan on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:50PM EDT Report Abuse

    All you have to do is put it in a bowl of rice and let it stay in there for a couple days. Saved 3 of my phones and an iPod.

  • 699 Posted by sillama.geo on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    I dropped mine, an LG Gyon, in a cup of green tea. Took it to the nearby service center. The technician took it apart, wiped it and blew the hairdryer on it, but it still didn't work. He thought I'd have to buy a new one! I came home and decided to go to the electronic mart next day, and placed the phone on top of my computor monitor, so I'd remember. Yes, you guessed it! A few hours later, the little electronic voice in my phone yelled, "Pulleeze, recharge your battery!!!" It's worked fine ever since.

  • 700 Posted by cameronmeikleca on Tue Jun 9, 2009 3:28AM EDT Report Abuse

    I just revived my nokia by taking the battery out, towel drying,even between the slider, then going over the phone with a vacuum cleaner hose. I sucked air from around anything that appeared to be a hole into the phone, speaker, mike, usb, slider. Any wet wicking its way in can be pulled out this way as these would be the very holes the water got in in the first place..The screen was fogging up, and after the air suction, it cleared, meaning it was mostly dry inside. I'm using a spare fido phone, 'my bar of soap phone', for a day before going back to the nokia full time. Sim cards are great :)

  • 701 Posted by kingcloverdistribution on Mon Jun 15, 2009 5:19PM EDT Report Abuse

    DRY-ALL is great for cell phones. My friend dropped his phone in the toilet. He used Dry-all of cell phones it is reusable. It works better than ever. he found it at dry-all.com

  • 702 Posted by smiculka@sbcglobal.net on Thu Jun 25, 2009 10:42AM EDT Report Abuse

    My son just bought a Blackberry II. 1 week later in ended up at the bottom of the pool. His friend told him to take it apart, and put it in the oven. Lowest setting temp. for about 20 minutes. He took his phone out of the oven, put it back together, works like new!!!

  • 703 Posted by housemasters on Sun Aug 23, 2009 1:18PM EDT Report Abuse

    Big thanks to everyone's suggestions. I just recovered my LG Dare from a 2 hour soak in a bucket of water. I never imaged the suggestion to dry it out in the oven would have really worked but it did. If your oven does not go as low as 150, 170 sitting on the oven mit with the oven door ajar will also work.

  • 704 Posted by crzychmarquis on Mon Oct 26, 2009 8:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    i am having trouble with my phone right now... i washed it... i put it in the oven on the lowest temperature... hope it works!!!

  • 705 Posted by crzychmarquis on Mon Oct 26, 2009 8:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    i am having trouble with my phone right now... i washed it... i put it in the oven on the lowest temperature... hope it works!!!

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