MagSafe used to fish out iPhone 12 Pro dropped in canal

Posted:
in iPhone edited June 2021
A man rescued an iPhone 12 Pro from a canal in Berlin, but instead of diving in, he took advantage of MagSafe and fished for the smartphone.

Magnet-fishing an iPhone from a canal [via <a href=@frederikriedel/Twitter]" height="731" />
Magnet-fishing an iPhone from a canal [via @frederikriedel/Twitter]


On Saturday, a friend of app developer Frederik Riedel dropped his iPhone 12 Pro into a canal in Berlin. At the time, it was thought the device was lost, as it sank into the mud at the bottom of the water.

An initial attempt to rescue the iPhone where its owner waded through the 3-foot-deep mud failed, with seeming "no way to find it." As told on Twitter, Riedel and the friend instead went down the route of magnet fishing.

A fishing road and line was produced, with a magnet attached to the end. It was lowered into the canal in the same area the iPhone was dropped in, and was able to attach to the magnets on the back used for MagSafe charging.

We built a magnetic fishing rod and catched it!!!!! MagSafe ftw pic.twitter.com/M4g4RTLZxF

-- Frederik Riedel (@frederikRiedel)


After it was pulled to the surface at approximately 3 a.m., the iPhone was determined to be working fine, with an almost full battery despite being submerged in the canal for hours.

The iPhone wasn't the only device recovered in the rescue attempt. During the initial wading session, a Nintendo Switch was pulled from the mud, though it was deemed "not functional anymore."

This is not the only time that magnets have been used to fish for iPhones. In March, a woman managed to retrieve her iPhone from a frozen lake after it was submerged for 30 days, using a magnet attached to a string.

Fashioning unusual tools for retrieval of Apple Products have occurred in other instances as well. For example, in September 2019, a report told of how one New York resident used a broom and duct tape, while another used dental floss and a magnet-holding e-cig charger, to pull AirPods from sidewalk grates.

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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    webweaselwebweasel Posts: 137member
    Heh, good work. Would a very strong magnet damage an iPhone I wonder? When we used to take canal holidays (in the UK) we had a super strong 140lb ‘sea searcher’ magnet to fish out any ferrous items that got knocked overboard.
    doozydozenwatto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 5
    fotoformatfotoformat Posts: 302member
    A "phishing" story with a difference, and on the "net" too!
    the1maximusBeatsmuthuk_vanalingamwatto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 5
    BeatsBeats Posts: 3,073member
    Amazing. Hardware developers should take advantage and make an iPhone fishing tool. Though I think the market would be too niche.

    Apple should make a video series called “Apple stories” or “iPhone Stories” and document these stories from around the world! My favorite is the iPhone 5C who saved a man from a bullet to his heart.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 5
    mike1mike1 Posts: 3,286member

    After it was pulled to the surface at approximately 3 a.m., the iPhone was determined to be working fine, with an almost full battery despite being submerged in the canal for hours.


    And yet there's at least one class action lawsuit claiming Apple is deceiving customers because somehow their phones stopped working after getting hit with a few raindrops.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 5
    nlrznlrz Posts: 11member
    A "phishing" story with a difference, and on the "net" too!
    Using such phishing tools in novel ways is a good "hack" to obtain someone's valuables and private property.
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