An unnecessary test at best - rather silly to be honest. Dropping an electronic into water that has no power going to it isn't going to do anything. The electronic should fire up without issue as long as it's given time to dry properly.
The electronics should be cleaned with iso alcohol (99%) as the minerals in water will degrade the electronics over time and will most likely cause the unit to fail sooner than it should.
Not silly actually. The unit had power, there was a battery in the device.
People have concerns about whether their high priced mods can survive getting dropped in the snow, in a puddle, in the sink, in a clothes washer.
The point of the test was to tell people it can.
If a
dna was dropped in the water, the display would be dead. Period.
juice spills have killed DNA's OLED displays. Something that really hasn't been discussed much amongst the DNA crowd.
People criticize ProVape for not updating their LED displays and for having their tube "open". The test was to show that this is for a reason. It's great to have a nice OLED to show you all this information screen, but sucks if you drop it on the beach and now you get no display, or you spill some
juice or a drink on it in a bar and bye bye display.
Bottom line, I bought the E-LVT first because I wanted a nearly indestructible regulated mod, little did I know, the closest thing to that had already existed for 4 years.