Failing that, a small tooth pick sized shard of plastic with a flat end - rub it with sandpaper, clean, then add a drop of super glue on the end, then attach it to inserted piece of headphone.
It happened to my daughters mac. I had to use a micro drill bit attached to a normal electric drill and then once it was in deep enough pulled the drill bit out with pliers along with the broken jack.
It happened to my daughters mac. I had to use a micro drill bit attached to a normal electric drill and then once it was in deep enough pulled the drill bit out with pliers along with the broken jack.
I might try that, I tried screwing a screw in that didn't work. Thanks
My iPhone wasn't charging and it was because of so much fluff and other crap in there.
You can get cans of compressed air from Maplins and it just blew everything out and it was fine again. Might be worth a try? (Depends on how wedged in it is though)
I had a bit of paper stuck in an iPhone jack once. I used a paper clip to get it out. But I somehow managed to mess something up, the iPhone went super hot, the battery couldn't handle it and the iPhone broke. Beyond that, I don't really have much to add.
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Failing that i wouldn't know what to try...
Failing that, a small tooth pick sized shard of plastic with a flat end - rub it with sandpaper, clean, then add a drop of super glue on the end, then attach it to inserted piece of headphone.
( Sorry, Paul)
You can get cans of compressed air from Maplins and it just blew everything out and it was fine again. Might be worth a try? (Depends on how wedged in it is though)
You may need to go to sound properties to enable speaker out at the rear plug.
@sadiejane1981 Edited to add: or buy something like this ebuyer.com/208980-dynamode-usb-soundcard-usb-soundcard2-0 for £4 to convert an unused USB port to a headphone socket?
(Although that looks a little fat to me so you'd have to be careful if there were other USB outlets abutting it.)
Stick it in and wait for the glue to settle then just pull it out.
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