1. Take the phone out of any holster.
2. Open the case. Take all the doors off of the phone.
3. Take the battery out and put it aside.
4. Get an oven thermometer. Put it in the oven where you can see it.
5. Pre heat the oven in your stove to some temperature.
6. Put the phone on a disposable paper plate.
7. Turn the oven off. Watch the thermometer as the oven cools.
8. When the temperature is down around 150 , put the phone in the oven.
9. When the temperature is down around 80 , take the phone out.
10. If you're ambitious, do the whole thing again, beginning with pre-heat the oven.
11. Put the battery in and reassemble the phone. DON'T turn it on.
12. Wire the phone up to charge the battery for an hour.
13. NOW check the phone. Turn it on and see what it does. Maybe take it
into a store that sells that kind of phone. Better ... take it into a store that
SERVICES that kind of phone. Have them look iot over and check it out.
14. See what you've got. THEN make the decision.
You dropped it in the toilet
* Call your plumber * ??? * Profit!
Honestly why would you want to? Do you know how much bacteria is present in a toilet?
EEWWWWW who would want a phone after its been in the toilet, just get a new one.
Quite possible - Try again
What about it? Are you wondering the value of the early 1870s "The Last Toilet of Charlotte Corday" ngraving print by Ward? Or are you wondering what the time prior to her execution was actually like? If you're wondering about the first question, then my answer is that, antique prints do not incur nearly as much value as one might imagine. It might be worth $15-20 in good condition.
he invented the toilet
A Georgia Lottery commercial.
Derrick was the FAGET who dropped Stanley's note book down the toilet
well
yes it is because you don't touch it with your hands which is very germy
on another wall. it'd be pretty embarrassing if you accidentally dropped one of your towels into the toilet, wouldn't it?