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Kindle Users

9.2K views 21 replies 13 participants last post by  LibShooter  
#1 ·
Just a heads up to anyone who has a kindle. I left my kindle in my car overnight, and it was kind of cold out side. Anyways, my kindle no longer works. The kindle is apparently very delicate to cold temperatures, the manual says 32f is the low end.

So for anyone putting survival docs on their kindle, i hope you live someplace warm, because the kindle will die in cold weather.
 
#3 ·
Well my kindle was the very first model, so i have gotten some good use out of it. It does say in the users manual about temperature damage, so i just got a new one(used) for my birthday. There is a chance i may have been able to hassle amazon, but i figure its was my fault for not reading the manual.

i just wanted to spread the word so it doesnt happen to anyone else that may not have read the manual like me :)
 
#7 ·
My kindle touch is one of the ones with e-ink , the owners manual only says don't charge the battery below 32 degrees or above 95 degrees or leave it in your car in sub zero temps.
I am leaving this Sunday for this trip and I have now decide it is not worth the risk taking on the road for the first part of the trip.
 
#15 ·
My brother left his Kindle in the car during Thanksgiving last year and half the screen froze and wouldn't change. He called Amazon and they sent him a new one free of charge and gave him 30 days to send his old Kindle back before they charged him for the new one.
 
#20 ·
Left my Kindle in the car for 2 days on accident. When I found it, it wasn't working, but I warmed it up in my jacket and reset it and then it worked. Got lucky, I guess.

Apparently this is a common issue, you can Google it for instructions on how to bring a dead Kindle back to life...
 
#21 ·
My kindle has been used and charged in 125F and used/kept as low as 20F (never tried charging it at that temp) without issue. The page turns were sluggish when cold but that wa about it. Either mine is a 'very good' one or yours was just a bad luck case?

Good point though. A lot of the things we use on a day to day basis may not like the extremes they will get put through if SHTF.