Haven't seen that on the iPhone. My wife did get a similar alert one day about moisture on her AW4.Had some music playing on my XS whilst showering earlier and of course it got wet, no big deal... until I went to charge it a bit later and got this warning. Is this new to ios13? Never seen it before.
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Pop it in a bag of rice overnight.
Had some music playing on my XS whilst showering earlier and of course it got wet, no big deal... until I went to charge it a bit later and got this warning. Is this new to ios13? Never seen it before.
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Doing the below will void your warranty. Your warranty may already be voided due to moisture. Do at own risk.Had some music playing on my XS whilst showering earlier and of course it got wet, no big deal... until I went to charge it a bit later and got this warning. Is this new to ios13? Never seen it before.
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The OP never asked for advice on what to do about it, but either way, this seems pretty extreme for what I would assume is likely just condensation in the Lightning port and a message that will likely go away within hours at most.Doing the below will void your warranty. Your warranty may already be voided due to moisture. Do at own risk.
Go on Amazon, buy a cheap DIY kit that comes with the proper iPhone screwdrivers.
Open up the XS, leave it overnight to air dry or take a blow dryer to it.
None of the rice methods will ensure that your device is dry. Open up that sucker so you can see for yourself. Better than a fried phone.
The OP is also running a phone with moisture from a shower, which is not recommended.The OP never asked for advice on what to do about it, but either way, this seems pretty extreme for what I would assume is likely just condensation in the Lightning port and a message that will likely go away within hours at most.
Hey, I’m not the one who suggested taking a hair dryer to a phone on the off-chance there’s any liquid inside the device, which is asinine for reasons including but certainly not limited to (likely unnecessarily) voiding the warranty.The OP is also running a phone with moisture from a shower, which is not recommended.
No one asked you to assume if his phone does or doesn’t have moisture internally, yet you gave your opinion.
I’m giving my opinion: I’d open it up and let it dry out.
If you’re getting a water indicator message after taking your phone into the shower, I’d say you have an “off-chance” that you may have water inside your device. If you’re gung-ho about your warranty, you wouldn’t fiddle with the advice given anyway (hence the warning). If your phone’s warranty is about to expire (lots of XS owners on here), you may not care about warranty and prefer to have your device not glitch out in a week due to the water damage you received while showering with a phone incorrectly.Hey, I’m not the one who suggested taking a hair dryer to a phone on the off-chance there’s any liquid inside the device, which is asinine for reasons including but certainly not limited to (likely unnecessarily) voiding the warranty.
See above.The only thing asinine in this thread are people telling someone to use rice to dry out a phone or assuming someone has condensation in a phone that’s been used against the manufacturer’s recommendations
Thanks for the insight, but I’ll continue on with my day.See above.
In the immortal words of every hood-rat in every ghetto of every city, “ain’t nobody got time for that!”Doing the below will void your warranty. Your warranty may already be voided due to moisture. Do at own risk.
Go on Amazon, buy a cheap DIY kit that comes with the proper iPhone screwdrivers.
Open up the XS, leave it overnight to air dry or take a blow dryer to it.
None of the rice methods will ensure that your device is dry. Open up that sucker so you can see for yourself. Better than a fried phone.
Do not do this. The phone has gaskets that can easily be damaged when opening it, thereby damaging the phones water resistance.Doing the below will void your warranty. Your warranty may already be voided due to moisture. Do at own risk.
Go on Amazon, buy a cheap DIY kit that comes with the proper iPhone screwdrivers.
Open up the XS, leave it overnight to air dry or take a blow dryer to it.
None of the rice methods will ensure that your device is dry. Open up that sucker so you can see for yourself. Better than a fried phone.
Do not listen to this man/woman.Do not do this. The phone has gaskets that can easily be damaged when opening it, thereby damaging the phones water resistance.
The message is indicating water in the lightning port, which is open to the air and will dry by itself.
Do not listen to this man/woman.
All can be well either way. With other situations, from friends and family, things haven’t gone as well as the OP. Using anecdotal evidence to make a claim is illogical. If I get a water indication on my phone and I’m out of warranty (or nearly out), I’ll be busting out a screwdriver and ensuring dryness. Assuming something is dry is a $1100 assumption. Do at your own risk.I disagree. Given the problem as originally explained, that's the logical and sensible thing to do. Jumping to conclusions about water being in the phone, when the evidence doesn't suggest such a thing seems a bit extreme to me.
Additionally, your advice will likely result in a phone sitting around for a day or two while you wait for your fancy screwdriver from Amazon. The other advice is to basically let it dry for a couple hours. Should that not do the trick, THEN I would advise ordering parts and disassembly. But to toss out the easy solution for the hardest, without any evidence suggesting it's the prudent course, seems a bit silly to me. Especially given the risk of causing further damage to the phone in the process.
But we don't even need to guess here. He did what the other poster suggested and all is well. So, question answered.
All can be well either way. With other situations, from friends and family, things haven’t gone as well as the OP. Using anecdotal evidence to make a claim is illogical. If I get a water indication on my phone and I’m out of warranty (or nearly out), I’ll be busting out a screwdriver and ensuring dryness. Assuming something is dry is a $1100 assumption. Do at your own risk.