Added: 4 months ago
From: liquipel
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  • I'm still waiting for you guys to apply this to the droid Bionic

  • FAKE!!! I sent my iPhone 4 in and all they did was destroy my dock, so I can't even charge my phone. I called liquipel and all they say is that their test results came back good. I went the apple store to get it fixed and for them to diagnose the problem they needed to charge the phone, so they couldn't fix it. My next option was the replace the phone for $150. I couldn't even do that, because liquipel isn't authorized by apple and voided my warranty with their application.

  • this is actually real. had it done to my phone. for those that think its oil: look at the capacitive screen, its moving because of water.

  • you guys should liquipel the ipod nanos so you have a water proof watch :)

  • Yes yes good fake but...nice try!what about the time in the clock that in 5 seconds change 3 minutes?lol

  • @TheodoreBriso where does it do that?

  • This is a Fake!

    The liquid that is poured is either oil or glycerine!

  • If i were to do the aplication twice or even 3 times would it be more water resistant ?

    A fair question i might say , as well as there is no feedback to real questions on here . Why ? .

    Contracts with " Lets say '' Samsung , for all of their modles to be coated so they are protcted would be a large leep into a lot of money , as well as a longer warranty on the purches of the product . Great creation for this era , but what is your future devolpments with this product ?

  • What is this sorcery?

  • 1:06 MAGIC..!

  • Would my booty rate go up if I tell to sexy girls my phone can be liquipeled ?

  • Was the point of this im not going swimming with it lol

  • Where do you go to get your phone liquipeled?

  • @AyoJonnahSteezy1118 you send it in there website in liquipel.com

  • can I liquipel my car and make it a submarine?

  • is it samsung galaxy s2 have liquipel too?

  • i want my clothes liquipeled!

  • can i have that

  • Moais

  • shut up and take my money

  • Whats the Health Effect of this touching skin ?

  • @Eye4NYC

    it's a HOC coating so it's not dangerous at all even when you lick it rofl

  • what kind of pressure does it resits?

  • for stupid people who says photoshop ,, PHOTOSHIO CANT HAPPEN IN VIDEOS !

  • @vladimair505 have you ever heard of after effects?

  • @vladimair505 Actually it can, there's an import video, animator tool, and export to video tool in Photoshop. So get your facts straight before you call others stupid.

  • my heart missed a beat when you poured the water! poor cellphone..

  • can it last more than 1 minute?

  • Wow.... It would be great if we see this in Samsung Galaxy S3.

  • lol sad cat :P

  • gremlins beware!

  • so is this limited to water only?

  • @yocam420 No. It also protects your phone from Sulphuric Acid too.

  • photoshop

  • Terrible demo. Show me real world applications. Show me the device working after being subjected to MORE water PRESSURE for a greater amount of time. Show me under water usage. This demo proves nothing.

  • @heyface30000 it's to repel water not to make the phone usable in water. IF the phone comes in contact with water it'll be ok not for u TO use it under/in water.

  • WHAT IS THIS WIZARDRY?!?!?!

  • @Cirap1 Wengardium Leviosa :)

  • I must have one ! :D .

  • wowwwwwwwwwwwwwww..

  • Fake and Gay!

  • Pour some liquid nitrogen on it!

  • nice one

  • I tried it on my Budgie, it lived until I used the blow-torch to get it off again.

  • I'll ship my cat to them instead.

  • revolutionary

  • can i do it on my penis so i dont get anyone pregnant?

  • How long does the coating remain? Is it permanent or do we have to redo the process after a certain period of time?

  • :watersound: me gusta

  • Is there any kind of residue-y feel when the phone is coated in this?

  • One thing is submerging under water with cover on but to take the cover off makes no sense since the battery and the rest will get wet so how can u explain that?

  • @XxiKarlosxX Aliens.

  • This is really cool for what it's meant to do - prevent against accidental water exposure. I was looking for products that can be used while fully submerged - this wasn't quite it for me - but I did find a cool company that waterproofs iPods. Underwater Audio waterproofs iPods from the inside using specialized chemicals - it's not" nano" but it works.

  • holly mother of shit !!

  • will u be doing this with blackberrys

    

  • Shut up and take my money!

  • how much does this cost?

  • How do I get this done to my galaxy nexus and how quickly can it be done?

  • HOLY SHIT!!!!!!!

  • But will it blend?

  • Holy crap!!

  • um wow, that makes absolutely no sense. even when you remove the battery cover? i think i believe in magic now

  • Comment removed

  • My main interest is if something like this is being employed, albeit in a nanoscale coating, how would the chargers charge when plugged into the ports? I read a reply that they test the port thousands of times to test wear of the coat. But it still makes me curious as to the design of it. If it is a coating, why will it work on only some devices, as when buying it online you need to select your device? If it because some phone's usb ports are always powered/active?

  • Liquipel is probably keeping its cool not responding to some stupid people. Water damages phones because it creates short outs in the circuit, ie it is a conductor and you are making contact a connect to contact b via the water. A method I use for my robotics is a thin epoxy coating, akin to induction wires. If I coated myself in epoxy, not a pleasant experience, and jumped in a tub, followed by a plugged in toaster, I would not die, because I am being kept from the circuit by the plastic.

  • SHUT UP AN TAKE MY MONEY!!!1!11!

  • will it work with salt water?

  • Is it only for phones? Have you ever considered using it on a gaming device.

  • i thought this bug was fixed in Life version 1.3.2

  • I need this done!!! How do I get this applied??

  • wat the hell is liquipel and how do u use it

  • Does the Liquipel coating get disolved with time / is a periodic "refresh" treatment required? Is Liquipel's design allow long submerged periods / will water eventually affect the device if the device is left for an extensive period of time under water?

  • How long can you put a phone under water with this? And how deep can you dive? Does it depend on the phones stability or the technology?

  • So much butthurt here. I think it's a great idea to protect your phone from water damage on a molecular level. So many drunk chicks could protect their phone from that inevitable plunge that it'll be taking in the toilet.

  • This shit is fucking stupid and I can see lots of lawsuits coming to to this shit ass company with their fake ass shit products.

  • I would like clean my phone like this ... for the dust 

  • more cooler than nokia

  • I tried this on my cat. It died.

  • @Psionical HA HA. You're an asshole.

  • Shut up and take my money

  • 9gag army... incoming, brace yourselves!

  • 9gag army

  • 9gag - WTF?????? WE'RE LIKE ALIENS AND SHIT LATELY, WATER NOT BREAKING ELECTRO DEVICES AND SHIT, WHAT NEXT? ALIEN SEX?

  • 9gag brought me here

  • 9 gag

    

  • Not bad.

  • distilled wather?!

  • A FEW QUESTIONS: What sort of pH levels has it been successfully tested to and what is it's pressure or temperature limits, I have a feeling that the phone may break before this though.

    Thanks!

  • If this stuff works, I can finally make toast in the bath! The possibilities are endless!

  • واثقين من نفسهم 

  • @po2879 i think the same :)

  • Distilled water is in fact not a conductor at all. The trick is to keep it from leaching anything conductive from the container it's in after distillation, or from the stuff it's poured on. This demo may have been done with distilled water, but the Pyrex dish, or the contained the water was poured from, or both of them, could have contributed conductive material to the water. (And probably did, given the screen's reaction to having been poured onto.)

  • @kelli217 Not distilled water, no. Highly purified and deionized water perhaps, but by exposing it to the air and residues that may be on the phone or in the container they used would likely introduces impurities. I would think that it also isn't so much the short circuits that may occur, but the corrosive effects of electrolysis that would result from the energized circuits being so close together that causes the damage.

  • I think Distilled water is actually safer than regular water, right? It's the minerals in stuff like tap water that cause the short circuits, distilled water isn't a very good conductor, right?

    The real test would be to show someone walking into the ocean with their phone and see how it works after that. :-)

  • @bpitas you´re right! make the test in the sea, pool or something like that...

  • Ross Nanotechnologies already did the same thing

  • Fact that There is a Kinda of Liquid Similar to Water that Does not Conduct Eletricity... it may explain this video

  • Woot, it'll be nice when this finally becomes standard for all electronics. I'll finally be able to throw friends in the pool/lake again without worrying about phones and watches and whatever!

  • This is AWSOME!

  • are they fucking kidding me? o.O

  • GET DA WATER NIGGUH, IT AINT GOING DOWN

  • The screen senses static for one...plus it's just a more sensitive touch screen. Everyones tripping out over nothing lol.

  • @ddknaim not at all, both screens are equally sensitive, iPhone's digitizer recognises non-finger inputs and ignores them - in case you leave your phone in your pocket, your leg will most likely never have the same footprint a finger has.

  • Why is this not built into phones by default?

    Seriously awesome.

  • they should just coat the windscreens of cars in this stuff... hence no need for window whippers 

  • @iseeyourbelly rainx windshield washer fluid is like $1.69 a gallon, it does exactly this

  • @iseeyourbelly You are talking about Teflon here..not hydrophobic.

  • @DarkReaper155 no, what @samjezard said was correct not teflon

  • Please note that the iPhone's touchscreen DID NOT go wild when in contact with the interference caused by water - just to prove more work has gone into it

  • @lipton5001 that only means the iphone's display is less sensitive. Nothing to do with "how much work went into it"

  • would this work on the htc wildfire s ?

  • ALL THIS IS FAKE! . THEY JUST USE OIL AND YOU THINK ITS WATER! LOOK AT THE BUBBLES! WATER DONT MAKE SO BIG BUBBLES!AND OIL DOESNT HURT ELECTRONIC DEVICES! THATS WHY PHONES IS STILL OPEN ! DONT BELIEVE THEM !!

  • @discoboyminimal How can you be so sure? They have a COATING, which is why the bubbles formed are BIGGER.

  • that touch screen is useless :/

  • @hasyerme WTF Why ?

  • @hasyerme The touchscreen senses static, water of course is going to interfere with it

  • How after plugging in the charger multiple times will it not remove the coating? If that coating gets removed then you will for sure have corrosion? How does this compare to Zaggs HZO? I am guessing they are all the same process that have yet to be mastered. Although it is clear on your website you do not warranty the actual device. Also you recommend it not to get wet. And power it off for atleast 5 hours. But thats the trick to making sure your device does not get damaged when wet anyway.

  • @bblatter We test the charging port 2500 times which is much more than any device should ever endure in its life cycle. From our research HZO's technology is not applicable to the wide array of devices that Liquipel is and is not the same as we are the inventors of our proprietary patent pending process. Liquipel is unable to tell what your device was exposed to and is a preventative coating. Without Liquipel corrosion will still develop and water sensors will change. Thanks Ben

  • I hate scams. Trying to steal my iPhone and have me pay for the pleasure it's destined water which doesn't conduct electricity. DO NOT GO ANYWHERE NEAR LIQUIPEL

  • Idk... Idk if id trust putting it on my evo

  • @supermariobrosfan123 The water makes the screen believe it is being touched (and many models are like this) but after being removed and dried there is no problem.

  • @supermariobrosfan123 Of course, this doesn't happen with an iPhone. The water doesn't affect it because the phone knows better than to think that it's someone's finger. It's one heck of a lot smarter than this Android crap.

  • its destiled water

  • @bellotero6911 Please see our latest video. We make sure to use sealed water bottles now so there is no question.

  • @bellotero6911 If it was DISTILLED water the screen wouldn't be glitching out like that.

  • @bellotero6911 um... Why don't you immerse your phone in distilled water and see how it likes it?

  • WTF? what sorcery is that?

  • @ShyCotty its some very strange sorcery

  • mottainai

  • Hahaha :D

    I must sooo laugh man :D

    G0:00D!

  • So why aree you using two "types" of water?

  • @ami3kbe i'm assuming the first one is liquipel, and the second one is real water, or viceversa

  • Um, it's intriguing. I'll give you that. My concern is the affect of the coating on your speakerphone, earpiece, and microphone.

  • Um, it's intriguing. I'll give you that. 

  • liquipel works on my iphone4

  • liquipel worked on my Xbox 360

  • I Have A HTC EVO 3D

    Will Liquipel Work On My Phone??

  • It's amazing that there is a news article every time apple releases an update to the iBooks App, you know, since everyone on the planet needs to know that they have made some "minor bug fixes," and yet, I have never even heard of this aside from randomly stumbling upon it. This is amazing.

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