iPhone 6s Plus condensation in camera lens and flash

(please note- i have an iPhone 6s Plus that i bought back in November 2017, so its only a few months old) i went to a soccer game and had some water bottles in my bag. my phone didnt get wet, it had a case on it. but, theres was moisture inside the case and lens. so, i put my hair dryer on cold settings (after rice for 1 hour didnt work), and it got rid of some of it but theres still a lot and i dont want to damage my phone. im leaving for a flight tomorrow morning and dont have the money to pay for any repairs atm. should i leave it in rice overnight until the morning? or, since i bought it less than a year ago, will warranty cover it?

iPhone 6s Plus, iOS 11.2.5

Posted on Apr 28, 2018 4:41 PM

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19 replies

Apr 28, 2018 6:00 PM in response to liviakryan

Have you turned it on?


Really though, if any water gets in the phone, Apple won't cover repair or replacement under warranty. The only thing they'll offer is an out of warranty replacement. Even if there's no liquid water in there and it seemingly works, if they find that any of the "liquid intrusion" detectors have been triggered, Apple will refuse to do any service - not even a battery replacement. The only thing they would offer is an out of warranty replacement.

Apr 28, 2018 5:45 PM in response to liviakryan

Even with the newer models designed to be water resistant at the factory, liquid damage isn't covered under warranty. Hair dryers aren't necessarily that great an idea either since they can just push any moisture around.


At this point the only thing Apple would do is offer an out of warranty replacement for roughly half the retail price. Many iPhones exchanged for replacements end up as refurbs for the next customer, but not if they've had liquid damage.


Do you have it backed up? Even if it manages to work again it may not be reliable. I'd really recommend backing it up if you haven't already.

Apr 28, 2018 6:11 PM in response to Lawrence Finch

Thank you very much! since i have a flight in the morning, do you think rice would at LEAST remove most of it if not all of it overnight? Especially since the phone isn't damaged (ive checked the sim card thing for indicators, its perfectly fine) and everything is working okay. its just the rear camera that is bugging me. Also, will the camera be good as new or will it only remove some of it?

Sorry for the questions. this just makes me very mad because i had so many problems trying to get this phone (stealing because of the wrong address, etc.), and if its not going to be restored i just don't feel there is any point in trying to fix it.

Apr 28, 2018 5:57 PM in response to liviakryan

It isn't the weather; no matter how humid it won't cause condensation in the phone. As to getting rid of it, store it, powered off, in a warm (not hot) location for a day or two.


BTW, while there are different views on whether rice is a good idea or not, there IS agreement that if it's going to work you must leave it in rice for days, not an hour. If you want to follow this approach, silica gel (available from most hardware stores, very inexpensive) works much better for removing moisture, as that is its sole purpose. Silica gel must be dehydrated before use; bake it in a 220º oven for 3 hours.

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iPhone 6s Plus condensation in camera lens and flash

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