The scenario has become a source of anxiety for many owners of Apple’s latest models. L’iPhone 17 turns off, battery dead. The user immediately plugs it into USB-C, expecting to see the red battery icon appear within seconds. But nothing happens. The screen remains stubbornly blackwithout the slightest sign of life, as if the device was permanently out of service. Consistent testimonials, particularly on forums like Reddit or iFixit, all describe the same frustrating experience, affecting both the Pro versions and the Air model.
Why force restart and USB-C cables don’t change anything?
Faced with this failure, users try the usual manipulations, without success. THE forced restartthis famous key combination (volume up, volume down, then holding the side button), gives no results. Changing your USB-C cable, power adapter, or even wall outlet doesn’t do anything. In some documented cases, even a Mac fails to detect the phone when it is connected.
The USB-C charge controller appears unable to initiate the flow of power to a completely discharged battery, leaving the phone in a deep sleep state from which it cannot wake by conventional means.
How big is the problem and how does it manifest itself?
The phenomenon fortunately seems sporadicwhich makes it all the more confusing. It does not occur systematically with each complete discharge, nor on all devices in circulation. A user can very well drain their battery several times without ever encountering this blockage, and then be confronted with it without warning. This random nature complicates the estimation of thereal size of the problem.
For the moment, the testimonies remain scattered across a few discussion threads, without a massive trend emerging. For its part, Apple has not done no official communication on the subject. This silence leaves users in the dark, without knowing whether it is a hardware defect or a software bug that could be corrected in a future update.
What is the unexpected solution to revive your phone?
The surprising solutionwhich seems to work every time, fits in just one accessory. Simply place the “dead” iPhone on a chargeur MagSafe and wait about ten minutes. After this time, the phone magically restarts, finally displaying the apple logo and then the charging icon. Inductive charging seems capable of “waking up” the battery where the USB-C port fails.
The most telling thing is that this trick is well known internally. Several users report having gone to an Apple Store with their inert device, and seeing the Genius Bar technicians immediately take out a wireless charger to resurrect it. If the bug is not irreversible, it remains very restrictive, because it requires having a MagSafe accessory on hand at the critical moment, which is far from always being the case.
