- Yoghurt drinks in an IPAQ
- Posted by Ren79 on February 11th, 2005
Hi there,
I've had a bit of an unfortuante incident with a yoghurt type drink in
my handbag - where my IPAQ 2200 was. I thought that it had only
reached the very top surface of the PDA, and it turned on happily to
start with, but then i realised that the bit where the stylus is
stored was filled with yoghurt-y gunk. Net result is that the thing
wont turn on anymore, and i can see that there is gunk behind the
power button and the "itask" button at the right hand side.
Anybody know if this is likely to be rescuable? And anywhere in the
UK that might be able to do it, I'm guessing its not something i'm
gonna be able to fix myself? I have tried obvious stuff like resets.
Thanks!
Ruth
- Posted by opa.piloot on February 11th, 2005
Ren79 wrote:
Remove battery and case; clean with a soft brush with ordinary water with
a timy amount of dish washing-up liquid. When clean, rinse with de-ionized
water and let dry thoroughly at a warm place, eg. above a radiator.
Be careful because of fragile components.
Afrer re-assembling, follow hard-reset and restore from backup
instructions as found in the user manual.
Success.
--
Veel plezier / Have fun
Bert
Mail via hccnet.nl
- Posted by Flying Tiger on February 11th, 2005
"Ren79" <ruthwade@ntlworld.com> schreef in bericht
news:6b8c9abd.0502110457.2fb303a2@posting.google.c om...
Your ipaq is beyond repair. It's dead forever
Yogurt drinks are sour, so your mainboard is ruined.
Milk drinks contain calcium too, also very bad for
internal electronic.
You could bring it in for service, but be prepared for the worst.
F.
- Posted by Flying Tiger on February 11th, 2005
"opa.piloot" <opa.piloot@forget.it> schreef in bericht
news:420CCD0E.5D6A01D2@forget.it...
Never follow above instructions, ordary water contains minerals
If REALLY necessary use de-mineralized water to clean electronic components.
Do not add washing liquids or or soaps.
Dry quickly with hairblower, otherwise electronic components will corrode.
(copper parts will turn greenish) and that means death for smd.......
F.
- Posted by opa.piloot on February 12th, 2005
Flying Tiger wrote:
I've got some experience in this field. Wather is a great solvent, especially
for yoghurt.
Maybe my tap-water is cleaner than yours but I think any water is better than
yoghurt .
Using other water than tap-water makes no sense; because it wil immediately be
contaminated by the yoghurt.
A small amount of washing liquid is recommended to lessen surface tension; this
will ensuer that all parts are wetted.
Moreover, I recommended using de-ionized water in the last step; because it's
the ions that do the damage.
Be carefull using a hairblower; the temperature might be way too high and the
display might get damaged.
Good drying is essentially, because moist can be trapped underneath surface
mounted devices;
24 hours on a warm radiater (70 dregrees centigrade or so) should be
sufficient.
Since the only other alternative is to throw the thing away, it is worth giving
it a try.
Don't wait too long, because the sooner the yoghurt is removed the better.
--
Veel plezier / Have fun
Bert
Mail via hccnet.nl
- Posted by Flying Tiger on February 12th, 2005
"opa.piloot" <opa.piloot@forget.it> schreef in bericht
news:420E088B.1571A68A@forget.it...
How the yogurt pda doing now?
Still dead, I guess......
F.
- Posted by r_z_aret@pen_fact.com on February 14th, 2005
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 16:19:42 +0100, "opa.piloot"
<opa.piloot@forget.it> wrote:
Around 1990, I went to a demo of the "Poqet", which was a DOS-based
handheld. The person giving the demo said rinsing with tap water and
air drying was the best way to handle spills (coffee, soda, etc.) or
dunks (swimming pool). I can't remember full context, but I'm quite
sure at least two of those examples came up. I'm quite sure the person
giving the demo was from the company making the Poqet and assume he
would give correct advice on those items.
I, somewhat naively, assume sensitivity to unexpected liquids depends
on just how the electronics are packaged, and the precise mixture of
metals used (not just which ones, but which ones are touching).
Perhaps some companies coat their boards to make them less sensitive?
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