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Sossity

macrumors 65816
Original poster
May 12, 2010
1,358
31
I have an iPhone 3gs and a 5s, and I had them with T Mobile pre paid, but have long since stopped using them. I do not think they are recognized anymore by T-mobile, but they still have phone numbers, and the sim cards in them. How would I go about resetting them, wiping them clean?
 

Speed38

macrumors 6502
Nov 5, 2011
288
126
WDC Metro area
I have an iPhone 3gs and a 5s, and I had them with T Mobile pre paid, but have long since stopped using them. I do not think they are recognized anymore by T-mobile, but they still have phone numbers, and the sim cards in them. How would I go about resetting them, wiping them clean?
Once they are wiped clean, what do you plan to do with them? I live in the WDC metro area and am trying to collect older gear like to give to resettled Afhan refugees. Children can still use them/connect them to the WiFi and play games on them...or can't they? Would they be about the same an an iPod?
 

Sossity

macrumors 65816
Original poster
May 12, 2010
1,358
31
Once they are wiped clean, what do you plan to do with them? I live in the WDC metro area and am trying to collect older gear like to give to resettled Afhan refugees. Children can still use them/connect them to the WiFi and play games on them...or can't they? Would they be about the same an an iPod?
I think they might be able to play games on them, I am just not sure about current games, since these are older models, and they would need an iTunes account to download them, and some of the games would probably not be free.

After I have wiped them, I might try to sell them on eBay, although, I do not think I would really get anything for the 3gs phone.

Are you interested in them?
 

Sossity

macrumors 65816
Original poster
May 12, 2010
1,358
31
Just to check, do I do the reset erase first before removing the SIM cards? or remove the SIM cards first? should I check with my carrier t-mobile to be sure they are properly disconnected from their service first?

I never really properly disconnected them from the service, I kind of just let the service lapse, since I thought my mother and aunt would want the phones, but they prefer flip phones, so they just went into my desk drawer for some years. So now when I try to log into my t-mobile with the numbers they have, they are not recognized.

They still have phone numbers from when I had a pay as you go plan from t-mobile.
 

eyoungren

macrumors Penryn
Aug 31, 2011
28,831
26,945
Children can still use them/connect them to the WiFi and play games on them...or can't they? Would they be about the same an an iPod?
My daughter learned how to use an iPhone via a Disney paint app on a 3GS. That was probably 2013 or so. I would imagine there are still older apps on the app store that can do things like that.
 

eyoungren

macrumors Penryn
Aug 31, 2011
28,831
26,945
After I have wiped them, I might try to sell them on eBay, although, I do not think I would really get anything for the 3gs phone.
You're right. I paid $20 for my current 3GS in January 2021. And that was for the 32GB model.
 

Speed38

macrumors 6502
Nov 5, 2011
288
126
WDC Metro area
I have always donated mine to women's shelters as they seem to be the most in need.
So... I am correct in my assumption that even those oldest iPhones that will no longer work because they only work with 3G networks which are being sunsetted could be of some use to children for games, etc., so long as they have a WiFi connection?
 

now i see it

macrumors G4
Jan 2, 2002
10,689
22,403
An old phone can still be a clock or a timer or a calendar or a camera or recording device or a note taking device or calculator … etc.

Old iPhones don’t have to connect to anything to be useful in some way.
 
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winxmac

macrumors 65816
Sep 1, 2021
1,066
1,281
You can still install old version of apps on those old models provided you have downloaded them before but if not you can download the newer versions using iTunes 12.6.5 on Windows then download the latest compatible version on the device... You can use it as an alarm clock or pocket calculator... You can also use it as pocket camera then transfer the files to the computer or log in to the App Store then download an app like Send Anywhere or use AirDrop to transfer the files from the old to the new device...

What iOS version are they on? Since they have been rarely used I believe they are close to the stock version of these devices but I may be wrong... I want an iPhone 5s/6s/6s Plus/SE on iOS 10.x and iPhone 5/5c on iOS 8.x
 

ian87w

macrumors G3
Feb 22, 2020
8,704
12,636
Indonesia
An old phone can still be a clock or a timer or a calendar or a camera or recording device or a note taking device or calculator … etc.

Old iPhones don’t have to connect to anything to be useful in some way.
Definitely.

But the issue with older phones will be the battery. Not only the battery health would already be bad, there's questionable reliability of old lithium ion batteries. Then there's the risk of them swelling up, etc. It's sad that our advance tech are still being limited by chemistry.
 

jenelemond

macrumors regular
Jan 20, 2022
137
70
Better go for the donation! It will be a great help for some deprived people! Also, you won't be benefitted much by selling them I think! 😇
 
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Sossity

macrumors 65816
Original poster
May 12, 2010
1,358
31
ok, well now it looks like nobody is going to benefit from them now, I cannot seem to get them to charge, I have had them plugged in a a few hours now, and no signs of life from the 5s, and the 3gs screen will flash every now and then with a battery showing with a little bit of red, but it has not progressed beyond that.

I think I might of had some photos on the 5s, is there any way I can revive it to get the photos off it at least?
 

MajorFubar

macrumors 68020
Oct 27, 2021
2,104
3,722
Lancashire UK
My son uses my old iPhone 6S loaded up with virtual bass-amp sims and an iRig Pro interface as part of his gigging rig. Literally no one listening cares the tone isn't 100% accurate to the tone of a mic'd-up 30kg bass amp, and he can DI it straight into the venue's mixing desk and get consistent bass sound at every venue. Downsides? The battery in the 6S is shagged, so he needs to have it plugged in to a lightning charger all the time unless the set is very short, otherwise the band suddenly becomes notably sans a bassman after about 45 minutes.
 
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ian87w

macrumors G3
Feb 22, 2020
8,704
12,636
Indonesia
ok, well now it looks like nobody is going to benefit from them now, I cannot seem to get them to charge, I have had them plugged in a a few hours now, and no signs of life from the 5s, and the 3gs screen will flash every now and then with a battery showing with a little bit of red, but it has not progressed beyond that.

I think I might of had some photos on the 5s, is there any way I can revive it to get the photos off it at least?
Get the battery replaced. It should be pretty inexpensive
This is exactly what annoys me of modern gadgets. The electronics would probably last forever, but the battery is the limitation.
 
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MajorFubar

macrumors 68020
Oct 27, 2021
2,104
3,722
Lancashire UK
Get the battery replaced. It should be pretty inexpensive
This is exactly what annoys me of modern gadgets. The electronics would probably last forever, but the battery is the limitation.
Batteries always were and always will be consumables. Old tech isn't obsoleted because it needs a battery replaced. It is purposefully obsoleted by its manufacturers. And that's not even a conspiracy, it's just business, and has been that way since Joe Consumer decided he wasn't paying money for OS upgrades. So the money has to come from hardware sales, which a lot of people will only buy when their old hardware becomes critically unsupported. So it becomes in the manufacturers' best interest to hurry that date along.
 
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snipr125

macrumors 68000
Oct 17, 2015
1,811
2,857
UK
Always keep one older iphone as a backup in case you lose your main phone (breakage, theft etc). I know friends and relatives who sold their older phones, lost their main phone and then had no phone to use for a few days, even weeks.
 
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Adarna

Suspended
Jan 1, 2015
685
429
If I could do a do over I'd have sold or made it a hand me down after backing them up and doing a factory reset.

If I lost the current iPhone I'm using I'd just buy a replacement.

Last thing I would want is be a burden to my partner by being an aspiring hoarder.
 
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Sossity

macrumors 65816
Original poster
May 12, 2010
1,358
31
Get the battery replaced. It should be pretty inexpensive
This is exactly what annoys me of modern gadgets. The electronics would probably last forever, but the battery is the limitation.

Are there good places online I could send it in for a replacement? I am not sure about apple, it is fairly old.
 

catfish743

macrumors 6502
Sep 12, 2007
348
58
Kentucky
Batteries always were and always will be consumables. Old tech isn't obsoleted because it needs a battery replaced. It is purposefully obsoleted by its manufacturers. And that's not even a conspiracy, it's just business, and has been that way since Joe Consumer decided he wasn't paying money for OS upgrades. So the money has to come from hardware sales, which a lot of people will only buy when their old hardware becomes critically unsupported. So it becomes in the manufacturers' best interest to hurry that date along.
A little off topic but I’m curious if anyone else would rather have more easily replaceable batteries and pay for OS upgrades instead (fully acknowledge this is a very hypothetical trade off)? I started OS X in 2007 and for a while I remember buying a physical dvd to upgrade before the App Store came along. It was only maybe 20 or 50 dollars? I can’t remember. I’d honestly rather purchase that upgrade and have a more eco friendly device anyday. I do agree with the sentiment of the quote tweet. Either you pay for the product or you are the product. I mean with Apple’s profit, I don’t see why we couldn’t have free upgrades AND more eco friendly devices. But they are a company that is out to make a profit.

Boy do I sometimes miss the old days when you could pop a battery out of your phone and just insert a new one.
 
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jagfan

macrumors member
Oct 28, 2014
69
31
JAX, FL area
I have an old iPhone 6 that my elderly mother was using. When the battery wouldn’t hold a charge, I bought her a replacement. I kept the iPhone 6 and decided to try and replace the battery myself. So I purchased a cheap replacement battery, followed the tutorial and successfully replaced the battery. It has been six months and the phone is holding a charge well. So I plan to keep it for an emergency replacement.
 

Sossity

macrumors 65816
Original poster
May 12, 2010
1,358
31
Ok, where is the best place to buy a replacement battery for the iphone 5s and 3gs?

I would like to be able to revive them, so I can heck and get any older leftover content of mine off them.
 
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