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All replies
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Helpful answers
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Jul 15, 2015 3:42 PM in response to OGELTHORPEby Csound1,My cat prefers Brandy, but I make him use a childs cup and a straw
But your advice (if executed in a timely manner) is good.
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Jul 15, 2015 3:53 PM in response to OGELTHORPEby Victoria6655321,What is a brand for non-residue electrical cleaner? Is it too late to do this now rather than right after the incident occurred?
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Jul 15, 2015 3:58 PM in response to Victoria6655321by Csound1,It's too late to do anything about the initial damage (liquid and electricity do not get on well) dismantling your Mac will make it ineligible for service from Apple so that should be considered. The future is unclear, this must be your decision.
As for a cleaner? products from CAIG are good, check this page. http://www.mcmelectronics.com/browse/Contact-Cleaners/0000000447
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Jul 31, 2015 3:47 AM in response to jykim0806by CoffeeWu,so i just spilled some water on my rMBP that I bought a month ago and it appeared not as bad as some of you described (mine didn't turn itself off). The water spilled on the lower part of the keyboard (I'd say up to the second row of the keyboard and down about half of the trackpad). I flipped the laptop upside down immediately and turned off the laptop (yes, from a very awkward position) and wiped the water away with paper towel blablabla.. I accidently turn it on twice while I was cleaning it and it's now sitting on my drying rack being fanned now.
Anyways, I know it's best to have it checked up, but I'm very afraid that the genius will ask me to replace the logic board no matter what . And I know the corrosion might be setting in as I'm typing, but heck, that's the only thing I can do now. My laptop turned on fine when I pressed the power btn (and TWICE!) so I have high hope that it will turn out fine. I'll report back after couple of days.
Don't get me wrong tho, if you have the cash to pay apple to have everything replaced, by all means, go for it. Because you never know how much damage you have done and it's best to replace them all at once.
But if you are like me who have no extra buck to spend, my suggestion is to
- turn it off and flip it upside down asap (the liquid will create short circuit and fry your board so turn it off before that happens)
- unplug power cord and other devices that are connected (take off the battery if you can)
- use towel to dry out any reachable liquid
- DO NOT turn it on until it's fully dried (by fully dried I mean leaving it for at least a day or two)
- DO NOT use hair dryer to try to speed up the process (the CPU is very sensitive to temperature and heating it would only shorten its already shortened life)
- I would suggest not to put it in a bag of rice tho rice is known for absorbing moisture. The rice or its dust might go in through your mac's vents and sticked on the water that's still there. When the water drys out, the dust will then stick to the mac's component causing possible overheat of the component in the future. With that said, if you just happened to have a bunch of moisture absorbing silica gel packs laying around, I wouldn't mind dumping my mac in there.
Something you should know tho, I'm not saying following these steps will definitely bring your macs to life -- the TYPE of the liquid, the AMOUNT, the LOCATION will be different for everyone so I can't guarantee you anything. I'm giving these advises simply because, coming from a computer engineering point of view (excuse my grammer), these steps make sense; plus, I dumped my cellphone in the toilet twice couple years ago and it's still working without a problem . But as someone pointed out already, once the liquid goes in, your mac is damaged. Following these steps will only, and maybe, let you use it for another while (maybe weeks, months, years). But that's all I can do now tho.
Good luck to you all, my liquid damaged pal
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Aug 20, 2015 10:39 AM in response to Victoria6655321by just1ed,This brand of cleaner works very well. The success rate with electrical contact cleaners is not that high. The best is to get an ultrasonic cleaner, pour in some alcohol, wash the logic board and then flush it with the electrical contact cleaner and after that, then leave it to dry. I wrote some things to do in my blog.
https://macplussg.wordpress.com/2015/08/20/what-to-do-if-you-spill-water-on-your -mac/
Apple Store geniuses or the case in my country, where we only have Apple Authorised Service Providers in Singapore, usually dismiss any chance of recovery and declare the Mac as dead because the logicboard has corrosion. Most of the time, the logicboard are hardy even after water spills and can be revived.
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Oct 6, 2015 9:49 AM in response to CoffeeWuby ranya_xx,hey! same thing happened to me.
did ur mac end up working? what else did u do?
thankss!
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Oct 6, 2015 2:15 PM in response to jykim0806by howarduns,I recommend that you turn it off, unplug the ac adapter and turn it upside down.
If the battery can be removed, do so. If not, unscrew the bottom case and unplug the internal power connector to the battery.
Next take it to an Apple-authorized technician or the Apple store asap.
A few year ago, I accidentally spilled water on my MacBook. I followed all of the steps above. The battery was removable. The technician kept the laptop overnight. I think that a cold fan was blowing on it. The only lasting damage was that my ctrl key didn't work.
Howard
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Oct 6, 2015 5:09 PM in response to ranya_xxby CoffeeWu,Good news to you! I'm typing with the very same mac that I had spilled water on and it's working perfectly fine. I opened the back case couple days after and I didn't even see the liquid contact indicator change its color (yes all of them and it took me awhile to find). So I guess even if I have problem later and bring it in to the apple store, the genius can't even tell what's wrong.
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Oct 7, 2015 4:41 AM in response to CoffeeWuby ranya_xx,hopefully mine ill turn out fine too! how long did u leave it alone for? its been 24 for me and im dyingg to open an see whats up
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Oct 7, 2015 3:57 PM in response to ranya_xxby CoffeeWu,I was out of town over the weekend so I left it out for about two To three days. Depends on where you are, for example I'm in California where it's super dry, and how much water you spilled. i would say leave it alone for like a two days just to be safe.
Hopefully yours will turns out fine!
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Oct 8, 2015 11:28 AM in response to ranya_xxby tivoboy,I ended up going with an ebay retailer, who does this work and replaces the keyboard..my nephews machine (which he spilled god knows what on) would only boot and the keyboard nor mouse did anything. I put it in the freezer, cooled it down just enough to do a backup. Sent in the machine, and the guy took pictures. It was gunked up.. he did a whole bunch of ultrasonic cleaning and de-gooing of the internals, fans, etc..
All in it was 99$ which included shipping back to me (and out bound I THINK)..had it back in four days total.
For the money I think it was very worth it.
I'm not going to advertise here, but if anyone wants a link email me @gmail. or pm.
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Aug 15, 2016 8:12 AM in response to jf4828by Yamillie,I have a Lenovo Ideapad 500 15ACZ. I spilled a FULL glass of tea on the keyboard by accident and none of the liquid spilled into the motherboard. What surprised me is that the keyboard had a metal plate that was above the paper. It stopped all the tea from seaping in so it kind of just floated on the keyboard I basically did what you did except when I turned the labtop back on everything was working perfect even the trackpad. But the keyboard itself was ruined, it kept spamming tab, control key, shift, caps lock. yeah it was a mess. Even with a usb keyboard when I pressed tab, the labtops keyboard started to spam tab. So the labtops keyboard started to interfere with the USB keyboards input. So I just had to remove it. Now I have the labtop set up as a desktop and have a monitor connected to it, so I have the labtop screen and the monitor. All the ports work, I was surprised to see the LCD on the labtop worked. Once I removed the labtop's keyboard no residue from the tea was there so that was also surprising.