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Question

iphone water damage how to tell?

Apr 4, 2012 3:15AM PDT

how to tell if your iphone has water damage?

Discussion is locked

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Answer
Try this link.
Apr 4, 2012 3:26AM PDT
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Try this link
Apr 19, 2012 11:29AM PDT

Thanks for the link.

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Answer
iphone water damage how to tell?
Apr 17, 2012 3:58AM PDT

If a device is exposed to water or other liquids, corrosion—an irreversible deterioration or degradation of materials—may result. This may cause the device to malfunction. If a device has been or is suspected to have been exposed to water or other liquids, inspect the following areas for evidence of corrosion: the dock connector, the headset/headphone jack, the dock screws, the speaker or microphone mesh, and any exposed metal parts

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Answer
How to tell if an iPhone 4 or iPhone 4S is water damaged
Apr 19, 2012 3:39PM PDT

You can tell if an iPhone is water damaged by several ways. There are usually two sensors if you unscrew the actual back (using the two bottom screws of the iPhone). These turn red when they are contacted with water (originally they are white). There are also two more water damage sensors, one in the headphone port, and one in the dock port. They are a little harder to see, but you do not need to unscrew the back in order to see them.

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Another Way
Apr 21, 2012 8:59AM PDT

If the aquarium screensaver looks too lifelike, you may have water damage.

The Apple link that someone posted is actually the best way. And if the phone is dripping, that would also be a clue..

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This thread sounds like.....
Apr 21, 2012 1:29PM PDT

.....a Jeff Foxworthy standup routine.

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Answer
cell phone providers, bad. Manufacturers, even worse
Apr 22, 2012 8:11AM PDT

Regarding Apple's statement: "If an iPhone or iPod [or any other brand phone] has been damaged by liquid ... the service for such liquid damage is not covered by ... warranty"

You should be so lucky. If you've ever had the experience of talking with your cellphone provider's customer service, I think you'll find that the warranty, as written, will not be honored. The conversation will go something like this:

"Please check the dot. What color is it?"
"Um, it's red."
"Sorry, your repair is not covered."

You will hear this regardless of what your actual symptom is. It doesn't matter what your problem is or what the ACTUAL cause is, once that little dot turns red or pink, no repair of ANY kind for ANY reason will be covered.

In principle, the dot is only an indication of water exposure, not a diagnosis of the cause of the failure. But, good luck trying to get any kind of help once the dot has turned. What you reasonably should expect and are entitled to is to have your phone properly diagnosed, verifying that an actual, irreversible "deterioration or degradation of materials" has occurred. If the manufacturer can tell you exactly what deteriorated, and exactly how it caused your phone to malfunction, then, and only then, should you be liable for any repair or replacement.

What will really happen? Well, if you phone fails under warranty, you'll get an immediate, free replacement, probably overnighted. But, if the dot is pink or red, the best you can hope for is to be without any phone at all for two weeks to a month. Then, your phone will be examined, and you'll be charged a $50 to $100 diagnostic fee after which you'll get your phone back, NOT repaired and you'll still have to buy a new phone. Oh, and that's the best outcome. That only happens if you make a stink. Bottom line, you'll get bupkes.