You can even place it in front of a fan blowing cool air to "help the drying process," the company says. However, it's not just that airflow is an effective way to dry your device out. According to Sarah McConomy , a phone expert and the chief operating officer for SellCell, putting your phone in rice can damage it.
Ian Kelly , a former employee in the mobile communications sector and current vice president of operations for NuLeaf Naturals, says he saw more phones damaged by rice than by water during his time working with mobile phones.
Many people turn to this method, however, because they think it will provide the fastest results, he notes. According to Kelly, evaporation through regular airflow can take an entire week or two depending on where you live, so "while it isn't as quick as the rice method, there are really no potential side effects or collateral damage caused by lodged grains or debris.
But while experts encourage the use of airflow, there are some other methods you can try that also don't have the risks associated with the rice method. If you have any leftover silica gel desiccants from packages or pill bottles, Lynch says you can try using these to dry your phone. All you have to do is lay a few packets on your wet cell phone. Don't stress if you have no silica gel packets on hand.
Photographer M. When the first phone was dunked into a pile of dry rice is impossible to say — but there is an ironic symmetry in the fact that we still use the method to keep our primary photography equipment safe.
So, does the trick work? In , Gazelle. Of the seven household desiccants they tested, uncooked rice was the least absorbent, behind cat litter, couscous, oatmeal, and instant rice. Craig Beinecke, co-founder of TekDry, a company that provides "emergency electronic device rescue services" says so too.
TekDry has developed a fancy machine that resembles a suitcase bomb and uses negative pressure and low heat to actively expel fluids out of a properly doused phone in roughly 20 minutes.
Of course that study should be taken with a grain of… salt. The research was entirely funded by a company whose business depends on the rice trick being ineffective.
And every time a phone falls into a toilet or sink, the trick is transmitted anew, from parent to child, from friend to friend. Countless testimonials speak to the efficacy of rice. It worked every time. The rice trick does have one unique and very powerful property. The worst thing you can do to a wet phone is to power it up before it dries completely — doing that is cell phone homicide in the first degree.
Unlike leaving the phone on a sunny windowsill, the rice trick places the phone out of sight, and maybe out of mind. The grain may not guard the device from the destructive powers of water, but the trick does temporarily remove a much more dangerous element: us, and our impatient, tech-driven neuroses.
Spending 12 hours, 24 hours, or even a few days — depending on the instructions you follow — without your phone can be hard. Having it sit in plain view makes it harder. But if we believe in the rice trick, we give it time to work its magic — time that maybe would have saved the phone with or without the rice. In effect, the rice trick only works because we believe it does. You can drop your phone in the airtight plastic pouch periodically like after your jeans get soaked in a rainstorm to make sure no lingering moisture starts doing damage inside your handset, or just use it if your phone encounters a full-on liqui-mergency.
Nanoflow X is another option. Same deal as the Nine Lives: You just seal up your phone inside the pouch, which is filled with desiccant, and then wait the specified amount of time 12 to 24 hours to let your phone dry out. The trick to all of these methods is that for the desiccant to do its magic, it needs to be in a sealed container so that it can absorb water only from your phone, and not from the outside air.
Also, you need to have enough of the desiccant present to absorb all the water. Following these tips, there's a good chance your phone could survive its untimely spill. But if it spends too much time underwater, you could be out of options. Updated Feb. If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Courtesy of NASA. Let's take a good look at our nearest celestial neighbor. News Releases.
Media Contacts. B-roll and images. Verizon Fact Sheet. RSS Feeds. Full Transparency. Fact or Fiction: Putting your phone in uncooked rice can save it from water damage. Learn more. Gazelle offers the following recommended tips for saving your smartphone from a watery end: Remove it quickly. The longer your phone stays underwater, the more likely it is to suffer a catastrophic failure. Get it out of there! Power Down. Shutting the phone off helps protect it from short-circuiting.
If possible, remove the battery and any other removable pieces like the SIM card. Dry it.
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