![]() Thanks in advance to anyone who has a piece of the information. Switched to one of the Apple made cables, and the problem isn't being reported.ĭoes anyone know whether the detection is done in the phone, or in the cable circuitry? Is it measuring leakage currents and seeing a mismatch across pins (similar scheme as ground fault detectors)? Same problem, where I get the message when the new cable is connected. Let it sit for 20 minutes, and powered the phone back up. Thought, if the connector on the iPhone 11 pro max had something on the pins/pads it could explain why the problem didn't show on the iPhone 12 Pro max, so I powered down the phone and cleaned the contacts with a small amount of alcohol on a slender swab. Be crude and wipe it on the hem of your shirt if you need to. Remove your USB cable and verify it’s dry. It is typically generated when a charger is connected. Even a smear of liquid on a USB cable could provoke this warning. ![]() The only other piece of info that might be useful is the warning message doesn't appear right away (> 5 minutes) - so it's possible it could be a heat up issue for the monitoring circuitry. Somehow, in the shuffle, you missed a tiny dribble of liquid clinging to the underside of your Lightning cable. ![]() Could be a combination of things, or different sensitivity between phones, but don't have enough info on what is being measured. ![]() Could be a iPhone 11 Pro max problem, but would think the problem would exist with the Apple manufactured cable. To confuse the matter, this problem doesn't appear when I connect this cable to an iPhone 12 pro max. I have the same issue with some cables I just purchased when connected to an iPhone 11 pro max - this is the second batch of cables (9), so trying to determine where the problem exists. ![]()
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