Never to use the hair drier on machines or phones soaked with liquids,
because it will lead to very high temperature on places while you
think it is still wet.
Tried it once on a phone and i got it non-fixable at all.

Now I had my exphone swimming in the red sea, and when i took it to
the repair man, i got the same answer :-S ....
I hope your luck would be more than mine.

On Aug 10, 5:22 pm, KwikOne <[email protected]> wrote:
> Unless you were to dis-assemble then what you are doing is good - it
> will
> just take time. Or, you could keep it in a warm dry location any
> remaining moisture
> will eventually evaporate. As for residue... This will remain
> especially
> since (I suspect) there was cream and sugar in the coffee (be like
> me - drink it black and no extra residue that is noticeable)
>
> On Aug 9, 10:54 pm, DaveyBrasco <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > The screen seems to now be partially working, actually I'm using that
> > very laptop to write this now, but there still seems to be fluid
> > trapped between the layers of the screen. I was told to use a vacuum
> > cleaner by a friend, to try and suck out any possible remaining fluid
> > from underneath the screen's shield and/or possibly any of the layers
> > composing the screen itself.
>
> > I also placed the entire laptop in a sealed bag with a large portion
> > of rice (brown), because I was told that could potentially remove some
> > of the moisture. Maybe I should try something else since there's still
> > some moisture and residue underneath the film.
>
> > Thanks again for all your suggestions.

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