Sounds *very* familiar.  Having the advantage of greater separation from
the euphoria, I would be really reluctant to do for someone, but I would
let them in on the fact *they* could do it.

I used iCracked for the screen and videos.  Around $75 for parts and 2-3
day shipping and includes sufficient tools, IIRC.  But mainly .. if he gets
the parts and decides its too tough (I came close), he can mail the phone
to them or get a local iCracked tech to finish the job.  They *dont* want
you to fail!

After doing it I keep remembering the questionable events like getting the
thing back together right and hoping I didn't break anything with the
spudgers and did that "snap" back on or oh God what was that noise!

   -- Owen

On Sat, Aug 4, 2012 at 10:21 AM, Steve Smith <[email protected]> wrote:

> YAY!   After 2 hours of stripping, swabbing (no visible corrosion or even
> water detectors triggered!) with alcohol (no, not Rye Whiskey, that came
> later)...  and re-assembling (damned glad to have Owen's Goggles for that)
> I fired up the phone and *nothing*!
>
> A friend had happened by to watch me drip sweat into the device and he
> asked innocently if maybe the battery was drained.  "Of course not!" I
> insisted as I plugged it into my USB to prove the point and *VOILA!* the
> pretty little silver apple with a bite taken out of it popped up and it
> booted right up and except for having a totally bogus idea of the date and
> time, all was good!
>
> 3-4 days later, it continues to function fine.   And my confidence in
> Apple and DIY returns!   After seeing the inside of the iPhone and all the
> seals and parts (and lack of triggered moisture sensors) I'm pretty sure my
> only problem the whole time was a bit of moisture in the on/off switch.
>  When I pulled it out of the pond in 5-10 secs, the screen had gone to "do
> you want to power off?" which is what it does when you punch the on/off
> switch... and of course 5 minutes later when it had powered itself on
> spontaneously, that could easily have been "just" the power switch shorting
> *again*... and then the several more times it powered on after my powering
> off ... ditto.
>
> On inspection of the on/off switch mechanism, it was evidently more open
> to water infiltration, while being sealed itself well enough to prevent
> further infiltration into the case.   I soaked a bit of paper in isopropyl
> and ran it between the button and the contacts (as best I could tell from
> the view I had without gutting the iPhone *completely*, so I'm suspecting
> that alone would have resolved my problem... the rest of the disassembly
> and swabbing with alcohol was probably a total red herring and/or good
> drill and/or a big risk of insulting some other part of the phone with my
> clumsiness.
>
> The "good deed punished" part comes from having a neighbor stop in whilst
> I was sweating into the pile of parts and then (after it was working)
> ask... "do you think you could help me replace my broken screen on my
> iPhone?" to which I boldly answered (in the euphoria of my phone being back
> in order) "of course!" without first checking the intricacy.  I had done 3
> other iPhone screens in the past (two 2s and a 3s) which were almost
> trivial compared to what I find the 4 is.   And also no way to replace just
> the glass... so $125 in screen and a plan to completely disassemble (kind
> of like eye surgery but having to go in through the back of the head to do
> it!) is on the table.
>
> It is all part of the pay-it-forward Karma I suppose.
>
> - Steve
>
>
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