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'Water-Resistant' Samsung Galaxy Phone Fails Water Resistance Test

In this Feb. 22, 2016, file photo, a waterproof Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge mobile phone is submersed in water during a preview of Samsung's flagship store, Samsung 837, in New York's Meatpacking District. Consumer Reports says Samsung’s Galaxy S7 Active malfunctions in water despite being marketed as water resistant, though the regular S7 and S7 Edge models passed. Consumer Reports rates the S7 and S7 Edge phones as “Excellent” and the Active likely would have joined them. Instead, Consumer Reports isn’t recommending the model because two phones failed after being submerged in water. - Richard Drew—AP
In this Feb. 22, 2016, file photo, a waterproof Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge mobile phone is submersed in water during a preview of Samsung's flagship store, Samsung 837, in New York's Meatpacking District. Consumer Reports says Samsung’s Galaxy S7 Active malfunctions in water despite being marketed as water resistant, though the regular S7 and S7 Edge models passed. Consumer Reports rates the S7 and S7 Edge phones as “Excellent” and the Active likely would have joined them. Instead, Consumer Reports isn’t recommending the model because two phones failed after being submerged in water. Richard Drew—AP

The new Samsung Galaxy S7 Active, offered exclusively by AT&T, phone was advertised as a rugged, water-resistant smartphone—a feature that could save a lot of people a lot of money.

The standard of water-resistance cited by Samsung was the IP68 international standard that means the phone should be able to function after being submerged for 30 minutes at a depth of 1.5 meters or less. But according to Consumer Reports, it doesn't actually meet that standard of water-resistance.

Consumer Reports submerged a phone in water for 30 minutes in a water tank with a pressure of 2.12 PSI, which simulates a depth of 1.5 meters or just under five feet. After the test, the phones had "green lines" on the screen, bubbles on camera lenses, and unresponsive touch screens.

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In the days following the tests, the phones never recovered.

Samsung dug in its heels in response to the test, telling the publication that the phones had met the standard, and suggested the tested phone had been faulty since consumer complaints have been few.

In comparison, the non "Active" standard model and "Edge" model passed this immersion test without a problem and rank at the top of Consumer Reports' phone rankings.

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