Samsung Galaxy A50 overheating issue when the phone is cool.
Raiyzus4
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Raiyzus -
Raiyzus -
Hello everyone,
The problem is as follows:
After going for a bike ride and getting caught in the rain of the century with buckets of rainwater and hail for about ten minutes with my phone (Samsung Galaxy A50) in my pockets, it was working perfectly fine.
Thus, it worked all morning after that, without any faults or problems. The issue appeared in the late afternoon when the phone displayed an overheating warning, initially not too dramatic, so I closed a few applications, and that was it.
By evening, the phone shut down due to overheating, even though it wasn't in use. I tried to turn it back on, and it did, but it still showed an overheating warning before turning off completely.
When I try to recharge it, it shows me an icon:
I then disassembled the phone to check for any signs of oxidation, nothing. I also let it dry on a radiator (although there were no signs of moisture)
I have some assumptions and/or solutions; perhaps the temperature sensor got damaged and is sending erroneous messages. Where exactly is this so-called sensor located on the Samsung Galaxy A50?
Is there any way to bypass the overheating protection at the software level?
Thank you for your advice and tips,
have a nice day.
The problem is as follows:
After going for a bike ride and getting caught in the rain of the century with buckets of rainwater and hail for about ten minutes with my phone (Samsung Galaxy A50) in my pockets, it was working perfectly fine.
Thus, it worked all morning after that, without any faults or problems. The issue appeared in the late afternoon when the phone displayed an overheating warning, initially not too dramatic, so I closed a few applications, and that was it.
By evening, the phone shut down due to overheating, even though it wasn't in use. I tried to turn it back on, and it did, but it still showed an overheating warning before turning off completely.
When I try to recharge it, it shows me an icon:
I then disassembled the phone to check for any signs of oxidation, nothing. I also let it dry on a radiator (although there were no signs of moisture)
I have some assumptions and/or solutions; perhaps the temperature sensor got damaged and is sending erroneous messages. Where exactly is this so-called sensor located on the Samsung Galaxy A50?
Is there any way to bypass the overheating protection at the software level?
Thank you for your advice and tips,
have a nice day.
I bought a phone.