Not really sure but I think she was putting something in the freezer and it fell out of a pajama pocket and she simply didn’t notice.
Thanks for the info folks. Probably try recharging it later today.
Not really sure but I think she was putting something in the freezer and it fell out of a pajama pocket and she simply didn’t notice.
Thanks for the info folks. Probably try recharging it later today.
I wrote that based solely on my opinion, which is based on 3+ decades of getting paid to design electronic stuff (airborne radar/flir stuff, helicopter gun controls, medical testing devices, PCI cards, industrial computers, etc).
I honestly didn’t know if any studies have been done, so I went googling, and it turns out that there have been a couple of studies done. And those studies found that the rice is, as I expected, pretty much useless.
If you ever end up trying to teach your phone how to swim again, next time wait a lot longer before plugging the battery back in. I very much doubt that all of the water was out of it. I recommend waiting at least 48 hours.
It made no sense anyway. I’m sure recently dried rice (i.e, fresh from the oven) can act as a decent desiccant, but the open bag sitting on the pantry shelf for a year? Pretty sure that has reached equilibrium with the humidity in the regular kitchen air several months ago, maybe even before it was ever opened. So at best, it’ll be able to absorb excess humidity in the air around the phone, and bring local humidity back down to regular kitchen air. So why not just skip the middle man, and just leave it out to dry on the kitchen counter? Preferably with a fan.
The technique I was given is as follows:
I’ve tested this to the extent of successfully reviving one phone (belonging to the wife of a friend) that fell into a sink, and a car key that went through a wash cycle. I can’t prove the rice made any difference - these devices might eventually have recovered on their own, without help. YMMV.