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| It took four dunks in liquid nitrogen – and a hard throw to the floor – to finally kill our Motorola Krzr. |
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The cellphone freeze test
Q I live in a cold climate. Can my
cellphone get damaged if I leave
it in a car or bag on a frigid day?
A People tend to assume that extreme
cold and mobile devices just dont
mix. After all, cold temperatures can freeze
liquid-crystal displays and slow the chemical
reaction that gives lithium-ion batteries
their charge.
But taking phones into the cold is unavoidable
if youve ever gone skiing,
or you simply live in Sutherland, youve
certainly spent hours in a freezing environment
with nothing more than a layer
of denim or a jacket pocket to shield
your phone from the chill.
Exactly how cold can a phone get before
it stops working? We decided to find out.
For help, we called up our friends at
Environ Laboratories, an environmental
testing facility in Minneapolis used by
the defence, aerospace and technology
industries to simulate extreme conditions.
We gave Environ a sample of six phones
from various manufacturers. These models
were the type of commodity phones that
service providers often give away for free
with new contracts none was billed as
ruggedised or designed to withstand
extreme temperatures. Environs job was
to freeze the gadgets in a temperaturecontrolled
chamber (lowest possible setting:
minus 73 degrees) until all six phones
stopped working no matter how much
cold that required. In other words, we
decided to push these phones way beyond
the limits of their design parameters and
warranties.
Beginning at 5 degrees (the equivalent
of a brisk Highveld winters morning), we
let each phone run for half an hour before
bringing the temperature down by 5
degrees. We repeated this incremental
temperature drop every half-hour until
the phones stopped working. Once a phone
died, we gave it one last dash of mercy
by bringing it back to room temperature
to see if warmth could revive it.
Other than minor hiccups (slight screen
dimming, slow key response), none of the
phones had any real problems down to
minus 23 degrees, when the low-battery
indicator popped up on one Samsung,
despite the fact that it had recently been
charged. At minus 29, the same phone
shut off (plugging it in and turning it on
quickly revived it), and the displays of
some of the other phones were difficult
to read.
Thirty below is where the real fun began,
with five of the six phones experiencing
serious battery or LCD problems the
display on a Nokia became an unreadable
block of blue, while bizarre bars polluted
another phones screen.
At minus 40, all but one of the phones
were rendered inoperable. The last phone
standing, an old Motorola
Krzr belonging to a PM staffer,
actually remained functional
until about minus 48, when its
battery died.
Remarkably, none of the
damage appeared to be permanent
all it took was a return to
room temperature to bring all of
the phones back to life.
Still, were electronic sadists,
and we werent going to let our
access to Environs environmental
testing facility and its vats of
liquid nitrogen go to waste.
Sure, the coldest temperature
ever recorded on Earth was just
minus 89,22, but we couldnt
resist finding out how our toughest competitor
could handle a dunk in a minus
157-degree bucket of liquid nitrogen.
Amazingly, the Motorola phone survived
multiple dips in the coolant. The
sub-sub-sub-zero swims caused its battery
to shut down, but once the phone was
warmed up, it came back to life with no
visible damage. We even dropped the
frozen phone to the floor from hip height.
And although we expected it to shatter,
the fall barely caused any damage. In
fact, it wasnt until we dunked the Krzr
in the liquid nitrogen four times, and then
forcibly threw it to the ground, that it
fi nally called it quits. Even then, the screen
still turned on when the phone was
plugged in (although it was unreadable),
and, amazingly, the audio still worked.
Some keys even appeared to produce a
response.
The results were reassuring, if not
astonishing. The bottom line: residents of
our winter snow areas might endure some
screen problems or short-lived batteries
on cold days, but nothing a warm room
couldnt cure. And if our phone can handle
repeated swims in one of the coldest
liquids on earth, yours can surely survive
a day on the slopes without worry. |