Electrostatically overloaded cell phone / radiation?

sa
6

I have a problem. At home it shoots up all the electronic devices. I just had a short circuit on my laptop and before that on the docking station. My cell phone battery (IPhone 8) charges the battery completely within 3 minutes. I can't hold the cell phone in my hand because it feels like it is attacking my body's energy. If I briefly held it in my hand, then my hands feel very bad afterwards and I have the urge to hold them under the tap or shake them. As if the part was draining my energy. Can this be related to the electricity? And if so, what could it be that everything charges so incredibly quickly and feels electrostatically unhealthy? Lg

Si

My guess is that the battery is defective.

sa

Ne keeps normal. And all electrical devices charge so quickly. So also my bluetooth headset!

ta

Let's put it this way:
If the battery was intact before, it is no longer intact after going from 0 to 100 in 3 seconds. Guaranteed. 😂

Change of clothes (especially socks!) And higher air humidity (40 to 60%) help against electrostatics. (Hold physics!)

Fa

Either you have a perceptual disorder, or you have supernatural things going on…

There's no scientific explanation or advice for what you write. A battery can't be fully charged in 3 minutes (empty to full) and a cell phone can't tap "energy" from your body.

What you mean by short circuit on laptop and docking station is unclear.

sa

OK. Thanks. Yes laptop and docking were defective. The laptop had a short circuit and the main board broke it.

Lo

That's about the first time I've heard that charging a smartphone battery takes "what feels like 3 minutes". Is a problem. So far it has always been said that the parts load too slowly and unload too quickly…

Let's start with household electricity. This should be within a tolerance of 230 V. Strong other electricity consumers (direct current S-Bahn directly next to the apartment) (or lightning strikes, which thankfully is very rare) could cause short voltage peaks. In order to protect the devices against this, there are plug strips with overvoltage protection in well-stocked electrical retailers. That protects the devices.

Then to the devices: laptop and docking station with a short circuit, that sounds like a defect and a consequential failure. I would take these devices out of service, they no longer seem to be operationally safe. This is due to the devices, not the power supply.

If your smartphone feels "velvety" when charging and otherwise not, then please dispose of your charger. This seems to be defective as well. (Or it is a super duper cheap device from CN with the wrong CE imprint.) Please only use undamaged chargers from a reputable (EU) source.

In addition, about the urge to wash your hands, I would ask you to speak to professional helpers. If you can't find anything, contact your family doctor. Whether this is ultimately unhealthy or not, I or anyone else here at Girlfriend (or other Internet forums) don't like to judge.