Your phone could overheat this week. This is how you keep it from dying – CNET

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Keep yourself (and your phone) cool. 


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Temperatures are set to skyrocket over roughly two-thirds of the US and Canada this weekend, with some states feeling well over 100 degrees. Cooling off at a pool, lake, beaches or water parks won’t just affect you — it could also affect your phone. Phone batteries and high heats can be a volatile mix. When internal temperatures grow too high, your phone could shut off, at best. At worst, the battery could expand to dangerous levels, and even combust.

Implosions of the type that affected Samsung’s Galaxy Note 7 in 2016 are rare. It’s much more common for a phone to turn itself off when it gets too hot to function, and then you’re left without a working phone. Worse, you might not even realize it.

Your phone will display a warning message if it’s overheated and needs to shut down. It should work OK again once it cools down, but you may have to help it escape the heat.

Here are some tips to protect your phone in the heat and avoid that scary warning message that tells you it’s going to stop working.

iphone-overheating

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Keep your phone out of direct sunlight

Now that you’re aware that an overheating phone is a real problem, make sure you keep your prized possession out of harmful rays.

If you’re at the pool or the beach, keep your phone tucked under your lounge chair towel or in a beach bag — especially if you take a catnap or a dip in the pool.

It’s also a bad idea to leave your phone in a hot car (e.g. in the trunk or glove box) or even in a ray of sunlight inside the house where greenhouse gases can cause interior temperatures to climb. No kidding, the National Weather Service in Omaha actually baked biscuits in a car. So excuse the pun, but your phone could be toast.

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Limit your phone use in the heat — here’s how

If your phone is hotter to the touch than usual, skip straight to the tips below. But if you know you’re going to be outside and it’s starting to warm up, take preventative measures to turn off the functions you aren’t using — Bluetooth, LTE, Wi-Fi, GPS and any apps that run in the background.

The less your phone is doing, the less its processor has to run, the less of a chance it’ll grow too hot inside.

How to cool an overheated phone if it gets too hot

1. Remove the charger cable if you plugged it in.
2. Move it into a cool, dark place.
3. Turn off the phone to let the processor completely spin down and cool.
4. Remove the case if it’s in one. This allows cooler air to circulate around the phone’s metal or glass surfaces.
5. Let cool, dry air blow on it (from your car’s AC, a fan or your refrigerator for a short period of time). This will help bring the phone’s internal temperature down faster and get it working again.
6. We recommend waiting at least 15 minutes, or longer, before turning it on to see if it’s sufficiently cooled.

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Keep your phone’s battery from overheating.


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What to do if your battery begins to swell

If your battery ever looks like it’s swelling or bulging, this could be a sign that your phone is in serious trouble. If it develops cracked edges or starts leaking fluid, do not touch it with your bare hands.

Use gloves or some other covering to place it into a bag and move it to a safe location, for example, a concrete floor in the middle of the garage, or a metal baking tray, in case it implodes or catches fire.

Immediately contact your carrier or device maker for customer service support. Do not attempt to use your phone. As we said before, this situation is extremely rare, so follow practical precautions to keep your device cool on even the hottest days.

Do you have any personal tips or horror stories to share? Tell us your stories in the comments below.

source: cnet.com