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Abused hardware stories

Jimmah

Golden Member
A company I used to work for was in the insurance restoration business, only electronics. Was passing by the other day and stopped in, ended up walking out with a pile of water-logged equipment. Found a D-Link WBR-2310 still dripping water (supposedly was in more than 6" water for a while).

http://i12.photobucket.com/albums/a235/xhiron/IMG_0266.jpg

http://i12.photobucket.com/albums/a235/xhiron/IMG_0265.jpg

She still works! It's passing traffic as I type this, averaging 10.5mbytes/sec. wired. Somehow even the wireless works. Can't access the CP though, and DHCP isn't functioning. This is the second soaked D-Link router I have that works (DIR-655 in similar shape, works as my AP).

Crazy how such sensitive stuff can survive such trauma.

Edit: After about 4 hours it has died, giving up it's magical blue smoke.
 
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Heck. A friend dropped her Chevy remote lock transmitter into my pool yesterday. It was only in the water for a minute. Before pushing any buttons, we opened it (there was only a bit of water in it) and wiped and blow-dried everything inside. Despite that, it no longer worked.
 
I ended up with my Canon HF S100 remote controller in my pocket. I was doing laundry one day and luckily i found it before it hit the wash machine. I was doing something with my other hand and talking to someone and not thinking threw the controller back in the dirty clothes basket.

It took a ride in the washing machine and since then hasn't worked and I can't find replacements ... fleebay sucks for those too...
 
That is because on the car remote, the button battery is still providing power to the IC chip inside the unit. So the water promptly shorted something out.
 
This Is Abuse...
Yuckville.jpg


It looked like someone had been using it in the back of a pickup truck, driving down a dirt road.
 
Ive had a hose fall off my radiator while playing with a man pump on it.

Man pump being an Iwaki RD-30 @ 25V.

Well needless to say, i was brave not to use clamps. I didnt see my PSU was @ 25V so when it turned on, about 32 feet of head pressure shot though my system.

The tubing flew right off, and i think i emptyed about a good 1/4 gallon onto my both my gpu's, my board, my psu.

XD

I had to prop a 21 inch box fan and put it out in the sun for 6 hours, but after it was completed dried everything fired up like it was fine.

So in short my computer got a very nice shower.

Despite that, it no longer worked.

LOL this is such a tease... telling us all that story only to have it come out as a failure.
 
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Its just water. During manufacturing, boards are often washed in water as part of the process.
 
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