Cold Temps & Droid Razr M

Garnet Weaver

New member
Jan 17, 2013
2
0
0
My new Droid Razr M will be left in my car for 9 hrs at a time exposing it to cold temps. Is this ok? If not, what should I do?
 
I leave mine in the car all day. Its been in the 20's and 30's for 2 weeks and I haven't had any problems with it.

Sent from my XT907 using Android Central Forums
 
It should be okay. I work outside in the winter (construction) and my phone is in my pocket of my Car hart jacket and gets very cold and it survives.

You could always wrap it in a small towel or something just to give it a little extra warmth.

Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Android Central Forums
 
My new Droid Razr M will be left in my car for 9 hrs at a time exposing it to cold temps. Is this ok? If not, what should I do?

Define "cold temps". Cold temps mean something totally different to someone in San Diego, CA and someone in Fairbanks, AK.
 
I would agree with the poster above who said wrap the phone in something like a towel, or maybe a sweatshirt. You should be alright.

Sent from my Sony Xperia ion
 
How would that help? The towel is not any warmer than the air that it's in.

At least covers the screen from having direct open air contact to have any bad affects of frost or condensation forming on it to freeze

Any protection is better than none

Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Android Central Forums
 
Most coats and jackets these days have an inside pocket made for a cell phone. I walk in temps in the single digits here in NH and no problem in the inside pocket.
 
Most coats and jackets these days have an inside pocket made for a cell phone. I walk in temps in the single digits here in NH and no problem in the inside pocket.
The only difference is that if you have the jacket on you, your body heat is what helps keep the phone warm. If you leave the phone in a car, even inside a jacket, there is nothing there to keep the phone warm.
 
I think the best answer for the OP is that your phone should be fine. Any extra protection you can provide the phone by covering the screen or wrapping the phone in a small towel, etc. is better than nothing. I'm sure during development phase of the devices they are put through temperature testing and have been designed to take it even though its probably not recommended if avoidable on a daily basis.

The only real bad result I can see coming from it is possibly the battery taking a small hit on the temperatures affecting the internals of the battery. Although this is probably minimal and you would really have to do some serious comparative testing of different situations of temperatures to prove this is even happening.
 
FYI, this is noted in the User Guide:
extreme heat or cold
Don?t store or use your mobile device in temperatures below -10?C (14?F) or
above 60?C (140?F). Don?t recharge your mobile device in temperatures below
0?C (32?F) or above 45?C (113?F).
I would expect these values to be very similar for most smartphones out there.
 
Define "cold temps". Cold temps mean something totally different to someone in San Diego, CA and someone in Fairbanks, AK.

Speaking of that, I just ordered a Razr M, and I hope it can withstand the freezing 50s we've been getting in San Diego

Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
 
This is just a suggestion, but what if you have music play during that time? Keep the CPU going to keep warmth, and it also shouldn't really do much to the battery.

Sent from my DROID RAZR using Android Central Forums
 
The only way wrapping it up will help is if it is on or charging(creating it's own heat). Otherwise, temperature is temperature. I'd leave it plugged in and charging and wrapped up. Better yet, carry it with you.