You’ll find that even an entirely drenched laptop will be fine after drying out. You’d be surprised how resilient systems are.
However, the long term is worse than the short term, depending on how fast you actioned the water damage.
Take it to your local repair shop, have them dismantle it and check for any remaining liquid and clean up where needed. You’ll want them to take note of any excess liquid damage or traces they found.
If its the type of PCBs that absorb liquid it’ll split within half a year, might still work but certainly dont count on it. If not, it’ll be fine.
At this point you should be taking storage backups, either by cloud media onedrive, etc or on external storage usb, ssd, etc
I’m going to go with it’s likely fine based on what you described and where the liquids were. I think you’d have a different story if the laptop was open and it fell directly on the keyboard. I wouldn’t expect pcb to have gotten wet.
You’ll find that even an entirely drenched laptop will be fine after drying out. You’d be surprised how resilient systems are.
However, the long term is worse than the short term, depending on how fast you actioned the water damage.
Take it to your local repair shop, have them dismantle it and check for any remaining liquid and clean up where needed. You’ll want them to take note of any excess liquid damage or traces they found.
If its the type of PCBs that absorb liquid it’ll split within half a year, might still work but certainly dont count on it. If not, it’ll be fine.
At this point you should be taking storage backups, either by cloud media onedrive, etc or on external storage usb, ssd, etc
I’m going to go with it’s likely fine based on what you described and where the liquids were. I think you’d have a different story if the laptop was open and it fell directly on the keyboard. I wouldn’t expect pcb to have gotten wet.