Phone thinks headphones are plugged in. - T-Mobile LG V10 Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

So, my wife works as a steward and had some sweet and sour sauce spill on her, like a lot of it, and now her phone thinks the headphones are plugged in always.
I tried a pipe cleaner dipped in alcohol, I tried a small piece of material soaked with alcohol. Neither have solved the issue. Any ideas on what I can try?

Compressed air?

q tips with light alcohol on it? might be too risky though, as you might lose some cotton in there. maybe do that first, then do the compressed air to get any leftover debris out?
also, you can use one of those things people use to floss their teeth. idk what their called. not flossers. they almost look like mini bottle cleaners.
Looks like this: http://www.lulusoso.com/upload/20120501/cleaning_feeding_bottle_brushes_Mini_bottle_brush.jpg
can usually find it in the dental section of the store. those might work better than q tips since the chances of losing fibers in the headphone jack is less.

I tried gun bore patches with alcohol wrapped around a pick. In the end it just worked itself out. -_-

Волк said:
I tried gun bore patches with alcohol wrapped around a pick. In the end it just worked itself out. -_-
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Hey buddy, haven't seen you around in years - still recommend your wipe tools to users in the old threads
Glad to see you in the v10 threads and that your headphone issue is fixed
Sent from my LG-H901 using XDA-Developers mobile app

Related

My water damage solution?

Turn on everything( GPS, 4G radio and such) download a new rom and play music through the speaker
I'm hoping to overheat the phone enough to evaporate all the water haha
Well I'll see how it goes and ill report back soon
Sent from my toilet dunked PG86100 using xda premium
Stick a cut off qtip in the headphone jack (so rice doesn't get jammed in there) and throw it in a plastic sandwich bag filled up with rice, will work much better. Heat + water + electronic will just fog up the screen. Leave it in a bag of rice for a few days, battery out.
Seriously. I had water dripping from my MP3 player, and it's been working for a good year after that, because of rice.
BlaydeX15 said:
Stick a cut off qtip in the headphone jack (so rice doesn't get jammed in there) and throw it in a plastic sandwich bag filled up with rice, will work much better. Heat + water + electronic will just fog up the screen. Leave it in a bag of rice for a few days, battery out.
Seriously. I had water dripping from my MP3 player, and it's been working for a good year after that, because of rice.
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That^
It worked for my key fob that got lost in the snow for 3 months.
BlaydeX15 said:
Stick a cut off qtip in the headphone jack (so rice doesn't get jammed in there) and throw it in a plastic sandwich bag filled up with rice, will work much better. Heat + water + electronic will just fog up the screen. Leave it in a bag of rice for a few days, battery out.
Seriously. I had water dripping from my MP3 player, and it's been working for a good year after that, because of rice.
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I've done that before but it wasn't exciting haha I thought I'd try this for some laughs but its actually working my cameras lenses that were foggy and aren't now and I keep catching some moisture in the housing
Sent from my PG86100 using xda premium
Ahhhhhhh! No no no!
Take the battery out quick quick quick! If you have water damage the first thing you do is remove power to the device! Water isn't what damages an electronic device. In fact water itself in its purest form H2O isn't even an electrical conductor. Water conducts electricity when something is dissolved in it and the ions dissociate, allowing charge to be carried through the water. Therefore if there is a salt, or something, or in this case dust, it will be able to conduct electricity, which if two points of contact in the device are shorted it can be powerful enough to destroy it.
The rice thing can sometimes work, but if the device had a lot of water get inside it there will be water in all the nook and crannies, even inside the processor. If the physical damage is already done to one or many pieces of the electronics there may not be any fixing it.
However, there is always a possibility that the ionized water is shorting circuits and hasn't damaged anything yet. If the device is to the point where it will no longer turn on, or screen appears dead you have nothing to lose in trying to fix it. I have saved several devices in the scenario I just mentioned using a mild solvent. You need to find a tear down guide to disassemble it. When you have it taken apart you can soak each individual part in isopropyl alcohol. You need to use the purest isopropyl alcohol you can find, ideally 100% isopropyl alcohol so it doesn't contain ANY water. However if you can't find a place to get that quickly, locally, for low cost use 91% isopropyl alcohol from Walmart or any drug store. I have used that concentration to successfully cure two devices that wouldn't turn on after water damage.
Put the alcohol in a large enough container that the parts fit in, and completely submerge the parts, may even need to include the battery in the solution. Leave it there about ten minutes, occasionally swirling to get the alcohol deep inside everything, processor, etc. Then remove it from the alcohol and let it AIR dry. To be ultra safe let it air dry for twenty four hours. You can then reassemble the device and test.
Alcohol is very volatile in air, so it evaporates very quickly (specially if that air is heated). Water and alcohol are miscible, so it will remove the water from inside every part. Good luck!
Just take your phone back to sprint and get another....Im going to assume you have insurance. Why take a chance that the phone could sustain some long term damage? Get a shiny brand new one and call it a day..
SBERG117 said:
Just take your phone back to sprint and get another....Im going to assume you have insurance. Why take a chance that the phone could sustain some long term damage? Get a shiny brand new one and call it a day..
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I would agree with that but he/she might not have $100 to drop around for a new insurance replacement phone. I have heard though of some repair centers replacing water damaged phones with a sprint ordered replacement as long as the phone works.
Sad Panda is 100% correct on the alcohol, so follow his directions! Alcohol has a high affinity for water and acts as a drying agent, drawing the water out of every corner and crevice.
oldjackbob said:
Sad Panda is 100% correct on the alcohol, so follow his directions! Alcohol has a high affinity for water and acts as a drying agent, drawing the water out of every corner and crevice.
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+1 sad panda to save the day
Sent from my PC36100 using xda premium
The only sensible thing to do would be to do what sad panda posted. What you're doing is just retarded.
I agree. I've been doing this for years on laptops. It also works well off you spill coke or tea on it. It also helps to brush off the components with a toothbrush while soaking them in alcohol.
Sent from my PG86100 using XDA App
Bag of rice will work 99.9% of the time. Depends on how much water it got will depend on how long u need to leave it in there. If it still turns on overnight should work. Take battery off and seal it up.
Sent from my PG86100 using XDA App
Hate to say it but it actually worked... No fog on the lenses, no foggy screen, capacitive buttons all work and respond, speakers sound just like they did before, I know it might just be dumb luck but it worked out and there's no visible signs of condensation I'm the phone so I'm a happy camper
I've done all the alcohol disassembling before but I only had a T6 instead of a T5 torx and I'm a broke college student so I didn't have rice so I tried my way and it worked! so continue with the bashing if you will
(Btw I have TEP but trying something new felt like a better thing to do than waste $100 on a 1.5 hboot replacement)
Sent from my PG86100 using xda premium
thatguy11285 said:
I'm a broke college student so I didn't have rice so I tried my way and it worked!
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Dude, a bag of rice is like four dollars.
But your idea is possibly the worst thing you could do for a phone. ONLY reason it worked is because evidently the water didn't seep in enough to cause enough damage.
Running power through a wet phone is the easiest way to kill it. Don't count on it working again for you in the future, you're lucky as hell.
Wow! So happy for you that it worked, don't try it again though! Even for a broke college student a liter of alcohol is two bucks. There are lots of nice guys on here. Even I would have sent you my torx drivers for free to help you out!
Glad everything is a ok! Good job! Phew!
This is hilarious.
Sent from my PG86100 using xda premium
If you have nothing to lose put the phone in bleach. it will bleach the water strip thing back white and leave the red lines. Let it dry then take it to sprint.
but only use this as a last resort. lol
eastside08 said:
If you have nothing to lose put the phone in bleach. it will bleach the water strip thing back white and leave the red lines. Let it dry then take it to sprint.
but only use this as a last resort. lol
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To my knowledge this won't get the sticker back to white and still maintain the original red lines. Those stickers work just like litmus paper works, they react over the neutral range of the pH scale. Bleach should react with the red chromophores but I just don't see how it will turn from solid red to anything but solid white, or worse a solid pink.
Have you personally tried that? Also bleach is chlorine + water + uhhh, hypochlorite at equilibrium. Since that is the case, the dissociation of ions have the same property as water and salt, or water and dust as I described before, so as long as one understood you are making the water damage worse, you could do that....your electronic device would likely burn up when electricity was applied again.
Just throw it in the microwave. I'd set the microwave to "defrost" though, just to play it safe.
Sent from my PG86100 using XDA App
flonker said:
Just throw it in the microwave. I'd set the microwave to "defrost" though, just to play it safe.
Sent from my PG86100 using XDA App
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+ 1
Sent from my PG86100 using xda premium

Evo went for a dip in the pool.

My daughter god bless her, was playing with my wifes phone taking pictures when as the title suggest she dropped it it in the pool.
I quickly pulled battery and let the heat of the sun dry it out, last night I finally managed to get some rice and let it sit for maybe 9 or so hours.
Powered up just now, camera works but no actual picture is taken, just a blank screen. I had to fix permissions I had a ton of fc errors.
So you think I should open it up and dry it out and maybe spray it down with compressed air?
It still has basic functions working, like phone data ect, just camera seems borked.
Comments withdrawn
I probably would not use or be very cautious with the compressed air, cause it can easily rip parts off the board.
Just look if there's already a sign of corrosion and try to wipe it off.
Sent from my ICS-powered HTC EVO 3D using xda premium
Give it as much time as you can to dry off. Even the memory card. Might want to try to do a full reset and see if that helps.
If you have insurance you might want to look at a few threads here about people being offered the Epic and Original Evo. Don't take anything less than a SGII
Sent from my PG86100 using xda app-developers app
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I have a hair dryer so Ill use that.
We are on vacation so Ill have to buy a screwdriver unless the Hotel has a little something available.
Thanks for the detailed links, much appreciated. I too was very surprised it worked, I think my clam shell case helped to keep the water out.
My daughter is happy getting mommy a new phone would have blew it for her getting a phone for back to school.
o0adam0o said:
Give it as much time as you can to dry off. Even the memory card. Might want to try to do a full reset and see if that helps.
If you have insurance you might want to look at a few threads here about people being offered the Epic and Original Evo. Don't take anything less than a SGII
Sent from my PG86100 using xda app-developers app
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Insurance, interesting. I do recall this 5 dollar charge for some type of accident insurance. Phone is only 8-9 months old.
Comments withdrawn
3 Deep evo
The problem actually isn't the water usually. It the rust and corroded contacts points left as that water dries. If its been as long as you say be grateful the phone still works at all. Especially the speakers(the water usually kills them on xontact).
With as many hours as you say have passed the damage is done. You need to put it in dry rice or salt or the little sodium pellets IMMEDIATELY
---------- Post added at 10:30 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:21 AM ----------
zcink said:
I don't if the EVO 3D does but other phones have strips inside that change color once it gets wet. So they can tell if the phone has been immersed in water like dropping it in a toilet or pool.
Its usually the first thing they check for under a warranty claim. They check to see if the phone was immersed in water.
Such a thing is usually not covered under warranty.
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If you pay for additional insurance you are covered after a fifty to one hundred dollar deductible. Everything is covered..theft,fire,water damage, etc..
If you are under manufacturer warranty only, then you are screwed they will always send the phone back and cite water damage. They only cover manufacturers defects.
Just popping in here, we would use denatured achohol to clean phones, it will evaporate the water from corroding the contacts.
Watch out if you have cuts on your fingers if you try it.
scariola said:
Just popping in here, we would use denatured achohol to clean phones, it will evaporate the water from corroding the contacts.
Watch out if you have cuts on your fingers if you try it.
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To add to that, a hair dryer or compressed air might actually push water deeper in or, in the hair dryer's case, melt something.
Save the Drama for your Mama with Tapatalk 2
Comments withdrawn
zcink said:
also, pushing water into the hairdryer's case will do nothing to the phone.
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It's funny how a missing comma can confuse people . I meant that the hair dryer could melt something. The dryer or compressed air could push water deeper into the phone. I fixed my post to clarify.
Save the Drama for your Mama with Tapatalk 2
asdfasdfasd
Comments withdrawn
I have not tried this because mercifully I have not dropped phone in the water yet. But years ago when I had instrumentation on high pressure pipelines, sometimes a seal would break and we would wind up with salt water all in the equipment. We would wash it down with distilled water, then to completely evaporate all the water, we would put it in a vacuum chamber. As the air pressure drops, the boiling point of water drops and the water literally boils away. I wonder if one of those space bags you connect to a vacuum cleaner would draw enough to make that work?
Don't know but something to file away for the next water accident.
Scar is right, we used Denatured Alcohol, every time I saw a phone come in with liquid, one of two things happened:
the customer was an ******* so i sent them on their marry little way to Asurion
OR
I took the phone apart, ignored the LDI's, gave that sucker a good alcohol bath, replaced the part malfunctioning like in your case the camera and gave it back to them.
I personally (just me) wouldn't use a blow dryer on anything like this, those parts are sensitive to heat unless you know what you're doing. I'm sure you can find a nice tech and they'll try and fix it for ya or they'll replace it unless you dont have TEP then you're screwed both ways, and for that I'm sorry
Funny I was thinking alcohol as well.
I have the phone apart now, it was super easy and the hotel im in had a nice screw driver set.
I have several sd cards and few new sims i can activate a new one when i get home.
Back in the day when I benched pc's I sprayed the motherboard and gpu with conformal spray ( we have it at work) Wondering if that would stop any corrosion from occurring.
Im not against trying for warranty but its my fault not failure so I would be upfront and see what if anything they would do. I have 3 lines and 7 year customer, maybe that will mean something.
Thanks for all the advice and suggestions, very much appreciated
Sorry to be off topic but it is sorta still on topic.. ill explain...
I got a macbook pro from someone the other day. They spilled milk on it and the keyboard doesnt work. I was gonna get some denatured alcohol and clean it but ive never done it. How would this be done? Do you actually just sit the board in it for a couple hours or do you just wipe it down with something, if so, what? Im also wondering this just in case i need to do this to any other electronic, like my 3d. Thanks for any help guys.
youdug said:
Sorry to be off topic but it is sorta still on topic.. ill explain...
I got a macbook pro from someone the other day. They spilled milk on it and the keyboard doesnt work. I was gonna get some denatured alcohol and clean it but ive never done it. How would this be done? Do you actually just sit the board in it for a couple hours or do you just wipe it down with something, if so, what? Im also wondering this just in case i need to do this to any other electronic, like my 3d. Thanks for any help guys.
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I use denatured alcohol with qtips or kimwipes which is lint free wipes.if you use qtips make sure you aren't leaving lint behind.also for any litmus papers which have been set off I will tell you bleach works magic
sent from my BAD A$$ Epic touch

Charging port acting funny

So I was at school and some kid spilled fruit punch on me and my phone was in my jacket pocket barely sticking out. I look and it landed right in the charging port and when I check my phone it says it's charging. I try to clean it out but don't really have anything st school so when I get home I got the air duster thing and sprayed the port. No go. I got a toothpick and got some dirt out no go. Rebooted and the problem seemed to be gone. This was 2 days ago. Yesterday when I woke up and took my phone off the charger it remained "charging" and a battery pull, reboot, cleaning, and recharging did not fix it. Somehow in the middle of the day it stopped. Fast forward to an hour ago. Phone screen turns on in my little dock and I notice. Then I see on the lockscreen it says "discharging 99%" then it would almost immediately switch to "charging" and back and forth basically flashing the two texts. I tried to lock the screen and fiddle with the port but nothing worked and then my phone froze I guess due to the rapid changing. Battery pull and an hour later everything seems to be normal. I need help on cleaning it though. As I have said I have used a cloth, a toothpick, a toothbrush. I have not used alcohol or taken the phone apart as I don't want to screw the phone up. I doubt I could use alcohol as I am 14 with protective parents. So any suggestions on what to do? Sorry for the wall of text.
Sent from my GS4 running CM11 Kandy Kane
The first thing you do when the phone is wet in any way is take out the battery and SIM and put it in rice. For at least a day depending on how wet it is. From what I've seen, trying to continue using it without letting it dry can lead to issues. At this point I dunno if it'd help but it couldn't hurt.
Phalanx7621 said:
The first thing you do when the phone is wet in any way is take out the battery and SIM and put it in rice. For at least a day depending on how wet it is. From what I've seen, trying to continue using it without letting it dry can lead to issues. At this point I dunno if it'd help but it couldn't hurt.
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If was basically one drop which I mostly got off at school but by the time I got home it was most definitely dry. I've also noticed when I take out the charging cable after a little bit there is dirt on the top right side every time and it's slightly sticky. I'm guessing this is the residual fruit punch which I can't clean off. Also if I let it charge it frequently stops and restarts the charging
Sent from my GS4 running CM11 Kandy Kane
122ninjas said:
If was basically one drop which I mostly got off at school but by the time I got home it was most definitely dry. I've also noticed when I take out the charging cable after a little bit there is dirt on the top right side every time and it's slightly sticky. I'm guessing this is the residual fruit punch which I can't clean off. Also if I let it charge it frequently stops and restarts the charging
Sent from my GS4 running CM11 Kandy Kane
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A little rubbing alcohol on a soft tooth brush to clean out the charging port may do it. Your mom and dad probably have some around the house.
Otherwise, you can replace the charging port for under $10 on ebay. Make sure you get the whole circuit board and not just the port. Watch a video on youtube and you'll see how easy it is. Just go slow and realize that the ribbon cable is glued down so you need to gently pry it off. You will need a tiny philips screwdriver to open it.
--Bud
cduced said:
A little rubbing alcohol on a soft tooth brush to clean out the charging port may do it. Your mom and dad probably have some around the house.
Otherwise, you can replace the charging port for under $10 on ebay. Make sure you get the whole circuit board and not just the port. Watch a video on youtube and you'll see how easy it is. Just go slow and realize that the ribbon cable is glued down so you need to gently pry it off. You will need a tiny philips screwdriver to open it.
--Bud
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Hmm alright I will try that when I get the chance
cduced said:
A little rubbing alcohol on a soft tooth brush to clean out the charging port may do it. Your mom and dad probably have some around the house.
Otherwise, you can replace the charging port for under $10 on ebay. Make sure you get the whole circuit board and not just the port. Watch a video on youtube and you'll see how easy it is. Just go slow and realize that the ribbon cable is glued down so you need to gently pry it off. You will need a tiny philips screwdriver to open it.
--Bud
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I agree with this approach. I use a toothbrush dipped in rubbing alcohol to clean the stone dust out of mine regularly...I work at an asphalt plant. Have the canned air ready after the alcohol cleaning.
Sent from my i777 using Tapatalk 2
Also get the HIGHEST percentage rubbing alcohol you can find. Drug stores usually have something around 90% but I think grocery stores only have 70%. This can be very crucial as the other 30% is usually water. For example at my work we use 99% isopropanol alcohol which is the same things as rubbing alcohol but almost pure. Good luck
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using xda premium
RockRatt said:
Also get the HIGHEST percentage rubbing alcohol you can find. Drug stores usually have something around 90% but I think grocery stores only have 70%. This can be very crucial as the other 30% is usually water. For example at my work we use 99% isopropanol alcohol which is the same things as rubbing alcohol but almost pure. Good luck
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using xda premium
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Also agree with this. But I use 70 percent and haven't had a problem yet.
Sent from my i777 using Tapatalk 2
Purim posiado
cduced said:
A little rubbing alcohol on a soft tooth brush to clean out the charging port may do it. Your mom and dad probably have some around the house.
Otherwise, you can replace the charging port for under $10 on ebay. Make sure you get the whole circuit board and not just the port. Watch a video on youtube and you'll see how easy it is. Just go slow and realize that the ribbon cable is glued down so you need to gently pry it off. You will need a tiny philips screwdriver to open it.
--Bud
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I also agree with the alcohol. When i had my Cappy the headphone jack was going in and out so i put rubbing alcohol on a Qtip and put it inside, let it dry, and VOILA! it worked. I say try this before replacing..it can't hurt right? **Directed towards Ninja**
I cleaned it but we didn't have rubbing alcohol. What my mom did was use vodka LOL I used the canned air right away as well so thanks everyone
Sent from my GS4 running CM11 Kandy Kane
122ninjas said:
I cleaned it but we didn't have rubbing alcohol. What my mom did was use vodka LOL I used the canned air right away as well so thanks everyone
Sent from my GS4 running CM11 Kandy Kane
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You gotta keep us in the loop on whether this works long term . Vodka is only about 40% alcohol, and probably has a bunch of other crap in the " rest". Friggin' awesome :thumbup: :beer:
Sent from my i777 using Tapatalk 2
dandrumheller said:
You gotta keep us in the loop on whether this works long term . Vodka is only about 40% alcohol, and probably has a bunch of other crap in the " rest". Friggin' awesome :thumbup: :beer:
Sent from my i777 using Tapatalk 2
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Haha I will
Sent from my GS4 running CM11 Kandy Kane
122ninjas said:
I cleaned it but we didn't have rubbing alcohol. What my mom did was use vodka LOL I used the canned air right away as well so thanks everyone
Sent from my GS4 running CM11 Kandy Kane
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Gives a whole new meaning to "drunk dialing" !!
Sent from my SGH-I777 using xda premium
If your mom is cool with having booze in the house have her get grain alcohol lol. Much better to clean out your devices with
Phalanx7621 said:
If your mom is cool with having booze in the house have her get grain alcohol lol. Much better to clean out your devices with
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It's just little travel bottles of vodka. No one drinks it it just sits there. Like 30+ at least lol. Dad gets them from traveling somehow
Sent from my GS4 running CM11 Kandy Kane
I recently had a cat throw up on my laptop. Had to completely take it apart to clean and dry, I had no alcohol in the house so ended up using vinegar on a q-tip. Worked, happened about a month ago.
RockRatt said:
Also get the HIGHEST percentage rubbing alcohol you can find. Drug stores usually have something around 90% but I think grocery stores only have 70%. This can be very crucial as the other 30% is usually water. For example at my work we use 99% isopropanol alcohol which is the same things as rubbing alcohol but almost pure. Good luck
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using xda premium
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Actually, alcohol is not the best solvent for salt/sugar (great for oils though). Deionized water is probably the best and safest way to clean electronics that are exposed to salts and/or sugar laden liquids - it is what most board houses use to post clean board after assembly (for those requiring it). Removing the battery and then liberally rinsing the port with DI water (or distilled water in a pinch), then drying it with a combo of absorbent then compressed air should remove the offending salts/sugar without harm to the electronics.
T
So after a few days I have reached a conclusion. Vodka solves all problems!
Sent from my GS4 running CM11 Kandy Kane

How I fixed my headphone jack on my phone.

So, I was never a believer when I heard of people cleaning the lint out of their headphone jacks and getting them to work again.
That is, until I found a quick and easy solution to fix it. I've read of people using compressed air, paper clips and electric parts cleaners. So I had some duct tape handy and an idea popped into my head. I took a small strip of tape and twirled it into a small enough stick shape, inserted it into the jack and turned it and pulled it out. I did this several times removing a tiny amount of lint each time. The amount of lint that I pulled out was so small that I didn't think it was going to make a difference. Then I plugged in my headphones and, bam, they worked like new!
As a side note, the jack on my phone is loose and wiggly, so naturally I thought that maybe the connections inside the phone were loose and I was going to have take the phone apart to try and fix it. My headphones would connect and disconnect whenever I would wiggle or even touch my headphone jack and it gradually got worse. Then one day it stopped working altogether.
This is not some gimmick. Give it a try. And never insert anything metal or sharp into the jack. You could damage the contacts.
Sent from my DROID X2 using Tapatalk 2
Juice3250 said:
This is not some gimmick. Give it a try. And never insert anything metal or sharp into the jack. You could damage the contacts.
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I'm a diehard lurker, but I have to bump this. Just fixed the exact same issue on a heavily abused Razr Maxx that I'd received from a friend, after months of dealing without headphones.
If you shine a light into the headphone jack and can't see the contacts at the very bottom, it's definitely lint that's keeping the jack from working. Personally, I had to use a paperclip to loosen it up a bit, but I'm pretty sure mine was a special case. Don't attempt with anything metal/sharp unless you have a light touch, and the tape on its own isn't helping.
I just tried this method on my Xperia Sola and it worked , I just reverse wrapped a duct tape on a piece of tooth pick so that the sticky part is outside and I entered it through the hole and turned it and pulled it out multiple times till all the Lint(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lint) were gone.
It cleaned the inner part and now it is working like new.
Simple but effective fix!
I was about to send my Xperia Z1 Compact for repair for this very reason, but I stumbled across this post. Thanks so much! Saved me a lot of hassle and embarrassment. A big ball of fluff came out of the headphone jack and now the sound is great. Cheers!
tahsnks for the idea, i finally used a standar pin with electrical tape around it and worked great!
Never had a problem with my DX2, but used this with both my Droid 3, and Droid 4
Problem solved
I was about to throw my nexus 5 out the window because of the issue with the headphones and i didnt want to i already had thrown out a previous cellphone because of this. I just turned off the phone ( paranoid paper clip or something could make contact with something and mess it up. And started to slowly pick and poke away. The amount of lint I pulled out was unbelievable! I didn't stop until i saw a shiny bottom. Now it's works perfectly fine . someone should invent something to either prevent this or an item to clean it. Just saying. Thanks!
Wooh! a big as$ thank you man! the way you worded your post was the only thing that made me give this charm a try. Now I'm the lucky owner of TWO working headphones haha
Mine does not have lint.I have cleaned it. But still it does not produce sound when I plug the earphone. I have to hold the earphone tightly to connect fully with the audio jack. Can you help me guys?
I tried this and I was able to clean out some lint, it helped some, but I still have to push it one way to get sound

Submerged my S-Pen in a sugary drink...

...it didn't fare so well.
I just thought some online documentation of S-Pen damage or malfunctions might be useful to some, so here goes:
My brother was fooling around with a ridiculously long straw in his drink and, well, let's just say that my S-Pen ended up submerged and had to be sucked out through the straw.
If you suck on the tip air comes through the button and vice versa. Once out, I sucked the fluid out through the tip and the button. It is completely dry as far as I can tell but it is still malfunctioning.
First thing I noticed was that there was no pointer when I hovered. Next I realized that this was because it thought I was touching the screen as soon as it was in range. Yes, I could scroll and interact as if I was tapping and swiping despite never touching the screen. The button activates and I can still hold it to circle things. It's often very hard to activate the capacitive buttons on the phone (menu/back), as if the hover function needs to be detected to activate them. It's like they often aren't receptive to input.
I have yet to see what soaking in distilled water or 100% isopropyl alcohol will do. I can also try replacing the tip. We shall see!
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OK, I soaked in distilled water for several minutes and dried it in the sunlight for four hours but it's not behaving any better. I decided to soak it longer before resorting to alcohol or changing the tip. I did make sure to get the air out as I submerged it (sucked on the tip as I lowered the button beneath the water). Yes, I've been doing a lot of "sucking" today.
The back of the pen floats so I had to hold it down with a spoon.
If anyone cares, it was Vault soda, which is Coca-Cola's "energy" soda.
Just to make sure it's the S-Pen at fault, I have an S-Pen with eraser that works fine (doesn't fit my phone, of course).
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You can get another for $30. http://www.samsung.com/us/mobile/cell-phones-accessories/ET-PN900SWESTA
bobbyphoenix said:
You can get another for $30. http://www.samsung.com/us/mobile/cell-phones-accessories/ET-PN900SWESTA
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Thanks. I'm well aware, but I'm going to see what else I can do first.
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CZroe said:
Thanks. I'm well aware, but I'm going to see what else I can do first.
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I got a new spen for a friend on amazon for like 10 bucks. Looked like OEM to me and no problems so far. I'm no expert but I would have tried the alcohol before water imo.
I would definitely try some rubbing alcohol, and then if you have an air compressor use that as well. Just keep laying on some rubbing alcohol and then blow the crap out of it with the air compressor, potentially it could break up any sugary gunk. If that doesn't work then it is likely screwed. Sugar+electronics is very bad.
CZroe said:
Thanks. I'm well aware, but I'm going to see what else I can do first.
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Don't you think you've done enough...
tony yayo said:
I got a new spen for a friend on amazon for like 10 bucks. Looked like OEM to me and no problems so far. I'm no expert but I would have tried the alcohol before water imo.
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Yeah. I've seen some for even less that looked identical except they lacked the Samsung logo. I'm probably going to stick with OEM Samsung though.
The point of trying distilled water first was to see if it can be done without alcohol. Alcohol can dissolve adhesives and has more potential for damage than inert distilled water. Because I am more lilely to have both options when I try water first, I'm trying water first. One reason it's worth knowing if water alone can fix it is that it is very hard to find 100% pure alcohol. If I have success with that then it may or may not be easily duplicated with common 70% or 91% isopropyl "rubbing" alcohol (there are more additives than just water), but at least we'll know enough to try.
Let's not forget: sodas are water-based and, thus, dried soda is typically water-soluable.
Fendulon said:
I would definitely try some rubbing alcohol, and then if you have an air compressor use that as well. Just keep laying on some rubbing alcohol and then blow the crap out of it with the air compressor, potentially it could break up any sugary gunk. If that doesn't work then it is likely screwed. Sugar+electronics is very bad.
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"Rubbing alcohol?" I have much better: 100% pure electronics cleaning grade isopropyl alcohol. I'm simply being systematic here for the sake of others (so we can see if such measures are required). I do have a tiny air compressor but I'm not going to try that until after I try changing the tip. It'll be a lot easier to blow inside with the tip removed. Heck, I might even break out the Water Pik when we get to that point. I wonder how the WaterPik handles alcohol?
les_garten said:
Don't you think you've done enough...
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Oh, hardy, har har.
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I would try submerging it in hot distilled water. That will break loose any dried up sugar left in it. Make sure to remove the tip first.
After that, throw it in a jar half full of no less that 97% isopropyl alcohol and shake that sucker.
Pull it out and place it on a paper towel for a few hours.
Then blow it out with canned air or something similar.
Reinsert the tip and test it out.
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Leaving it in any type of alcohol will strip the plastic chrome off.
A couple of minutes won't but hours will.
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Update: Well, I soaked it in distilled water for hours and then dried it over night and everything works great now, no alcohol required.
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Glad to hear that.

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