In a world where we
are all completely and utterly obsessed with our cell phones it is not surprising
to hear the recent finding of a survey done by Telenav. 70% of people surveyed
would rather give up alcohol for a week than go without their phone for a week.
One third of all people would rather go without sex for a week, 63% would give
up chocolate, and 55% would rather avoid caffeine than go phoneless for seven
days. After hearing the results of this
survey it makes sense that when a cell phone gets wet people are in a rush to
dry it out. There are many remedies out there. DRY-ALL is a one of a kind
absorbent that uses blue bead technology ™, a sixty year old family secret to
dry wet electronics. It is unlike anything else.
DRY-ALL is the
fastest, most effective way to dry a wet cell phone it is independently tested
and proven to work. There are lots of do-it-yourself techniques to save wet
cell phones. They do not dry quickly and effectively like DRY-ALL. DRY-ALL
works by using their proprietary blend of absorbents that rapidly suck up
moisture and lock it in. Unlike silica DRY-ALL traps moisture inside and
absorbs to full capacity. Silica absorbs and releases moisture and never reaches
full absorption capacity. Some do-it-yourself remedies like rice and heat can actually cause more damage to a wet cell phone. After 48 hours of testing with rice in a sealed container, the phone still had water droplets inside. Rice itself does not have a high absorption rate of moisture. Rice absorbs moisture and becomes sticky when cooked due to the rapid heating of the starch itself, but when rice sits sealed with a wet cell phone at room temperature it does not pull moisture out of the circuitry of the soaked phone. In most situations this home remedy can cause irreparable damage to your phone by allowing the water to sit inside your phone for too long before it dries on its own. This solution often results in replacing the phone and all information such as contacts, emails, music, and applications. Other techniques that are commonly suggested when a cell phone gets wet is a hair dryer, using a clothes dryer, placing in direct sun near a windshield, or using an oven to dry the wet phone. A cell phones inner circuitry is extremely delicate and held together by tiny solder points. When you use any source of heat on your phone directly it melts these tiny solder points causing damage to the inner workings of your cell phone. Melting the internal solder on your phone could cause the wiring to come loose and your phone will have damage that cannot be repaired easily, inexpensively, or sometimes at all. Using heat as a solution results in replacing the phone and all information such as contacts, emails, music, and applications.
DRY-ALL can meet any challenge, successfully drying out phones that have just been splashed and phones that have been submerged for up to 45 minutes. DRY-ALL works best when it is used right away, but has saved phones days after the initial soaking. DRY-ALLs’ Wet Cell Phone Emergency Kit dries phones in 48 hours. For those that cannot wait that long DRY-ALL has a Wet Smart Phone Emergency Kit that dries phones in a short 6 hour time frame allowing you to get back to your hectic life, phone in hand. No matter what type of liquid soaks your phone, such as beer, soda, juice, salt water, coffee, milk, or sports drinks, DRY-ALL can dry it out.
The fastest most reliable way to dry a wet cell phone is no stranger to saving important electronics. DRY-ALL has been saving sensitive electronics since before WWII. DRY-ALL products were used during WWII to keep important military equipment dry during overseas shipments. Later DRY-ALL was used by NASA. For the past fifty years DRY-ALL products have been removing damaging moisture from the inside of hearing aids giving them as much as double the lifespan. Today DRY-ALL is in the business of saving consumers’ wet electronics at home with their easy to use Emergency Kits.
DRY-ALL is available at Radio Shack stores Nationwide as well as Pep Boys and several online retailers. http://www.dry-all.com
No comments:
Post a Comment