Water Eject
A free water eject sound that may help push light water out of your phone speaker after a splash. Hold the speaker facing down, play one short cycle, then test.
Use this page when your phone speaker sounds muffled after a light splash, rain, sweat, or steam. The sound may help move surface-level water near the speaker grille, but it is not a hardware repair.
Use a high but comfortable volume, not maximum. Hold the speaker side facing down. Do not charge a wet phone. If your phone was fully submerged or met saltwater or pool water, stop and read the water safety guide instead.
Plays a low gated tone that may help push light water out of the speaker.
Hold the phone with the speaker facing down so gravity can help.
Quick water check. Was it more than a light splash, for example pool water, salt water, a sugary drink, or full submersion?
After this cycle
- Test the speaker
- Try one more short cycle only if it improved
- Read the water guide if it sounds worse
Ready when you are. Press play to start a short cycle.
Before you start
- Speaker facing down
- Run one short cycle
- Test the sound after
Cycle complete. Test your speaker now.
Did the sound improve?
- Turn off Bluetooth so sound plays from the phone.
- Raise the media volume to high but comfortable.
- Turn off silent mode or do not disturb.
- Tap play again, browsers need one tap to start audio.
- Try another browser, for example Chrome or Safari.
- Remove the case or any blockage near the speaker grille.
- No app
- No login
- No microphone
- No data collected
Your browser cannot play this tone. Try a current version of Chrome, Safari, Firefox, or Edge.
If your phone got splashed and the sound went muffled, water eject is the quick, free thing to try first. This tool plays a low, deep tone that vibrates your speaker, which may help move trapped water droplets toward the opening of the grille so they can leave. It runs in your browser, so there is nothing to download and no account to create, and it never asks for microphone access.
How it works
What water eject does
Water eject uses sound to move water, not magic. Your speaker has a small part called the diaphragm that vibrates to make sound. A low, deep tone makes it move with long, strong strokes. Those strokes can shake a water droplet hard enough to break the grip that holds it against the speaker mesh, and with the phone held speaker side down, gravity carries the freed water out through the grille. Vibration breaks the grip, gravity does the removal.
The tone sits in the low bass range your speaker already plays every time you listen to music, so nothing here pushes the hardware past what it was built for. It is the same idea Apple built into the Apple Watch Water Lock feature, which plays tones to clear the watch speaker after a swim. Phones do not ship with a built-in version, so this browser tool applies the well-known idea carefully to a phone speaker. It is gentle and contact-free. Nothing enters the speaker holes, so there is no risk of tearing the mesh or pushing anything deeper.
Honest limit
That gentleness is also the honest limit. Sound can move what sits near the surface of the grille. It cannot reach water that has already traveled deep inside the phone, which is why the next sections matter as much as the button above.
Decision guide
When to use water eject
Use it when the water is recent, the amount is small, and the phone otherwise works normally. Skip straight to the safety guide for anything more serious.
Water is likely sitting on or just behind the mesh, held by surface tension.
- Splash at the sink, a few drops of rain, or a damp pocket
- Sweat after a run, especially from an armband or waistband
- Steam from a hot shower that left the speaker sounding dull
- Muffled or low sound that started right after one of those everyday moments
Water may have reached past the speaker. Powering the speaker while the inside is wet is a risk you do not need to take.
- Phone went fully under water in a sink, bucket, pool, toilet, or the sea
- Saltwater or pool water exposure
- Phone feels warm for no reason
- Liquid detection alert showing when you plug in
- Phone will not turn on
Safe setup
How to use it safely, speaker facing down
The technique matters more than the volume. A few seconds of setup gives the best result and keeps the phone safe.
-
Dry the outside and remove the case
Wipe the outside of the phone dry with a soft cloth and take the case off before you start.
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Stop charging and turn Bluetooth off
Make sure the phone is not charging, and turn Bluetooth off so the sound plays from the phone speaker, not your earbuds or car.
-
Hold the phone with the speaker side facing straight down
This is the step people skip, and it is the one that lets gravity carry the water out through the grille.
Key step -
Set the volume high but comfortable
You do not need maximum volume. Some tools insist on it, and that advice is wrong. Loud, long playback stresses the speaker without working better.
Not maximum -
Play one short cycle and let it finish
Run one short cycle all the way through without interrupting it.
-
Wipe any droplets at the grille, then test your sound
Wipe away any droplets you see at the grille, then test your sound to hear whether it has improved.
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Repeat carefully, then stop
If it improved, run one more short cycle. If nothing changes after two or three cycles, stop. More cycles past that point do not help.
Stop at two or three
Still muffled after a few cycles?
If the speaker is still muffled, let the phone sit speaker side down for ten to fifteen minutes, then test again. A little trapped moisture often clears on its own with time. To hear the result honestly instead of guessing, run a quick check on the speaker test page before and after.
Safe water eject habits
Short cycles and testing between them matter more than loud volume.
Water severity guide
How wet is your phone, really?
Not every wet phone is the same emergency, and the right move depends on how much water and what kind. Thirty seconds of honesty here saves the phone.
Tool may help
Light splash
A light splash means a few drops, rain, sweat, or steam on a phone that works normally with only muffled sound. The water sits near the grille, which is exactly where vibration can reach it.
- Few drops, rain, sweat, or steam
- Phone works normally apart from muffled sound
- Water is likely sitting at or near the grille
Skip the tool
Heavy exposure
Heavy exposure means the phone went under water, or met saltwater or pool water, or shows a warning sign. Water may be past the speaker, where vibration cannot reach it.
- Phone went under water in a sink, bucket, pool, toilet, or the sea
- Saltwater or pool water exposure
- Phone feels warm, screen flickers, or liquid detection alert is showing
- Phone will not turn on
Salt, chlorine, and the residue problem
The dirtier or saltier the water, the less this is a sound problem and the more it is a residue problem. Salt and chlorine corrode metal contacts as they dry, and corrosion grows for days after the phone feels fine. Sound cannot reach it. For anything beyond a light splash, the full path lives in the remove water from speaker guide.
Splash, submersion, and saltwater: what to do next
Capability boundaries
What water eject may help with, and what it cannot
When the only thing in the way is a droplet on the mesh, a vibration really can move it. When the damage is deeper, no sound tool on any website or app can reach it.
Surface-level water
May help
It may help with light water near the speaker grille after a splash, rain, sweat, or steam, and with the muffled or low sound that follows. The droplet sits on the mesh where vibration can reach it.
- Light water near the speaker grille
- Muffled or low sound after a splash
- Sweat or steam near the speaker
- A small, recent exposure on a healthy phone
- Dull sound on a phone that otherwise works normally
Internal or hardware issue
Cannot fix
It cannot fix water that reached deep inside the phone, corrosion from salt or pool water, a short circuit, a blown speaker, broken hardware, or a phone that was fully submerged. It also cannot dry the inside of a sealed phone.
- Internal liquid damage deep inside the phone
- Corrosion from salt or pool water
- A short circuit or a blown speaker
- Broken hardware or a fully submerged phone
- A phone that will not turn on
Louder or longer cycles will not change that. No sound tool on any website or app can reach deep internal damage.
Stopping early protects the phone
Stopping early and protecting the phone is the smart move, and it usually costs less than waiting while corrosion spreads. If the sound does not improve after a couple of short cycles, the issue is likely past the surface where this tool operates.
Water eject can and cannot
Device compatibility
Works on iPhone, Android, and budget phones
Water eject runs in your phone browser, so it works the same way on iPhone and Android with nothing to install. The sound plays through your speaker whether you hold an iPhone, a Samsung, a Xiaomi or Redmi, an Oppo, a Vivo, a Realme, or a OnePlus, and it loads fast even on a slow connection because there is almost nothing to download.
The only real difference between phones is where the speaker sits. Most fire sound from the bottom edge, so face that edge down. If you are not sure, play any sound and feel where it comes from.
Honest note on water resistance
An IP67 or IP68 rating means a phone can survive a brief, shallow dip in lab conditions, but that seal weakens as the phone ages, and even a rated phone can trap water in the grille where the rating does nothing. Clearing that trapped surface water is exactly what this tool is for.
Recovery path
Still muffled after water eject?
If a few short cycles did not clear it, that is information, not failure. Work through this in order.
Let the phone sit speaker side down for a few hours of air drying. Do not charge it while it might still be damp. Give moisture a route out before doing anything else.
After it dries, run a speaker test to hear whether anything changed on its own. Drying alone sometimes does what a cycle cannot.
If the sound is dry but dull rather than wet, the cause may be dust rather than water. The speaker dust cleaner handles that path.
If the audio is distorted or crackling rather than just quiet, or nothing changes after a full day of drying, stop. Distortion after drying points at the hardware itself. A repair technician can open the phone and check for liquid damage or corrosion that no sound can reach.
Water eject in Hindi and Hinglish
Bahut log search karte hain water nikalne wala sound ya phone speaker se pani kaise nikale. Jawab upar wala tool hai.
Tarika simple hai: phone ko bahar se sukhayein, case hatayein, speaker ko neeche ki taraf rakhein, volume comfortable rakhein (maximum nahi), aur ek short cycle chalayein. Phir sound test karein.
अगर आपने पानी निकालें खोजा है, तो ऊपर दिया गया Water Eject टूल इसी के लिए है, और सिर्फ ग्रिल के पास के हल्के पानी के लिए।
एक ज़रूरी बात: गीले फोन को charge बिलकुल न करें, hair dryer का इस्तेमाल न करें, और स्पीकर में पिन न डालें। अगर फोन पूरा पानी में डूब गया था, तो पहले हमारी पूरी guide पढ़ें।
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers about Water Eject, safe cycles, speaker direction, volume, iPhone, Android, and when to stop.
What is water eject?
Water eject is a method of clearing light water from a phone speaker using sound. A low, deep tone vibrates the speaker so trapped droplets near the grille are pushed toward the opening, and gravity carries them out when the speaker faces down.
Does the water eject sound really work?
For light water near the grille, it often helps, and you can confirm it yourself with a speaker test before and after. It cannot reach water deep inside the phone, and it cannot fix corrosion or hardware.
How long should I play the water eject sound?
One short cycle, then check your sound. If it helped, run one more. Stop after two or three cycles, because anything the sound can move has moved by then.
Should my phone speaker face down?
Yes, straight down. The vibration loosens the water, but gravity is what carries it out of the grille.
Do I need maximum volume?
No. A high but comfortable volume is right. Maximum volume does not remove water better, it only stresses the speaker over long runs.
Is water eject safe for my phone?
Yes, used as guided. The tone sits in the normal range your speaker already uses for music. The safety rules are about the water: no charging while wet, no heat, and short cycles only.
Can I use it if my phone fell in water?
If it was a brief splash and the phone works normally, yes. If it went fully under, or met saltwater or pool water, no. Skip the tool, do not charge it, and follow the remove water from speaker guide first.
Does it work on iPhone and Android?
Yes. It runs in Safari, Chrome, Samsung Internet, and other modern browsers, with no app and no permissions needed. Face the speaker edge down and run a short cycle.
Why is my speaker still muffled after water eject?
Either the water is deeper than sound can reach, the phone needs more drying time, or the problem was dust rather than water. Air dry, test again, and if distortion remains, see a technician.
What does water nikalne wala sound mean?
It is Hinglish for the sound that takes the water out. Use the Water Eject tool above with the speaker facing down, only for light water near the grille.
One more thing
Ready to clear the water?
If your phone took a light splash, the first attempt costs you nothing. Scroll up, hold the speaker side facing down, set a comfortable volume, and play one short cycle. Then let a quick test tell you the truth. If it clears, wonderful. If it does not after two or three cycles, stop, keep the phone speaker-down to dry, and read the water guide for the safe next step. Water eject is here whenever your sound needs a quick, gentle nudge.
