Tell HN: My phone just told me to check for moisture in the USB port
I just spilled some tea on my phone (a Samsung Galaxy S9), and it popped up a notification telling me to check and make sure the USB port is dry before charging.
I didn't know phones did this nowadays. I wanted to share it with HN in case anyone else is surprised by it.
43 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 73.3 ms ] threadPity, because I wanted to hand this one on to an older relative in a few months, but I'm not about to saddle her with this.
OPPO invented this when they started deploying VOOC charging (serious current,) standard Android has since copied it.
They measure the resistance in between data pins periodically. If there is no voltage, but resistance is low, they show this alert.
Got a waterproof phone specifically to listen to podcasts and make notes in the shower so I'll just have to deal with low power mode for a few hours.
.. sometimes a quick blast from an air compressor will sort it, but this is my personal property and I don't advise anyone do anything ever.
I can barely use an e-reader in a static hot tub, lol, can't imagine actually trying to actively use the phone with a waterfall above my head.
As for typing I'm either writing something short enough the mis-taps aren't too awful to deal with or I'll dictate it. I'm not writing emails or anything, just jotting down quick notes and todo items to expand on later so typos and mis-wording don't matter too much.
I haven't looked into how it works, but I guess it senses a short across some of the pins inside?
Useful feature to prevent the phone cooking itself.
Most lithium ion chargers have (or should have) some kind of short circuit protection. It would make sense that the internal charging unit could make this information available to the operating system.
Example: https://www.maximintegrated.com/en/products/power/protection...
They have to prove the water caused the issue, not that a sticker got wet. It's like "warranty void if removed" stickers - not legally enforceable.
https://www.ftc.gov/legal-library/browse/statutes/magnuson-m...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnuson%E2%80%93Moss_Warranty...
In one case, I had gotten into the habit of storing my phone next to my water bottle, which I think caused condensation from the cord temperature, inside the port. A very stressful few days unable to charge.
Curiously it wasn't raining at the time and had been charging ok for an hour or so. It was the only time I saw this error during the 5,000 km trip - including times when it was raining hard.
Unplugging and replugging the (2 amp) lead did nothing, but leaving it unplugged for ~30 mins seemed to fix it.
Do people take their phones into bodies of water? I still worry about mine getting wet when I bring it into the bathroom.
(If Apple, with all their data, think it's a net-profitable offer, I must be net-losing on the deal versus the default of self-insurance. Especially since I am a more-prudent-than-average device owner!)
I wouldn't take it into saltwater though. That doesn't seem great for any exposed contacts... or anything, really, except fish and things that eat fish.