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The glove compartment is basically the pantry of your car.

It’s a convenient—albeit, sometimes


messy—place to store all of your driving essentials: insurance information, the vehicle’s owner’s
manual, snacks, napkins, hand sanitizer, the list goes on. But that list should never include your
cell phone.
Admittedly, there are a number of valid reasons to stash your phone away in the glove
compartment while you drive. For one, it won’t slide all over the seat or bang around in your
cupholder. More importantly, with your phone out of sight, you may be less tempted to check it on
the road and avoid a potential accident. Ford U.K. and the road-safety organization
Brake launched a campaign in 2017 to start calling glove compartments “phone boxes” for this very
reason. Other organizations, like the “Glove It” movement, have also advocated for this habit.
The problem is, leaving your phone in your glove compartment can do serious damage to the
device. You’re more likely to forget to take your phone with you when you get out of the car if it’s
stored in a place you can’t see it, leaving it vulnerable to extreme temperatures. Exposing your
phone to excess heat (around 95˚F or higher) can lead to data loss, corruption, and even
permanent battery damage, TIME reports, and a parked car left in 95˚ heat can warm up to 116˚F
in just an hour. That means even if your car is left in hot temperatures that don’t reach 95˚F, the
interior of your car could still reach that harmful threshold. Storing your phone in the glove
compartment doesn’t save it from that heat. In fact, that could make it worse.
Extremely cold temperatures can do equal damage. According to  TIME, phones exposed to cold
weather (around 32˚F or below) can experience a shorter battery life, have display problems, or
shut off unexpectedly. It could even cause the glass to shatter. Don’t miss these other things that
are killing your smartphone battery.

Safe driving solutions


So how can you drive around with your phone and keep yourself and your device safe at the same
time? If you have an iPhone, use the “Do Not Disturb While Driving” feature, which prevents
notifications from popping up while you drive and can send an automatic response to texts
explaining that you’re driving. (One study found that this feature is actually effective for drivers.)
Apps like LifeSaver can also block texts and calls and even reward you for driving safely. The
simplest option is to turn it off altogether. Here are more tricks to keep yourself from texting and
driving.
However, apps don’t solve the problem of where to store your device while you drive. That’s where
smartphone car mounts come in. Mounts are both a secure place to store your phone while your
text-blocking apps are turned on and a safe way to use your phone as a GPS when
necessary. Wirecutter ranked the iOttie Easy One Touch 4 as the best smartphone mount for most
drivers. It can hold any size phone, and you can choose from a dash/windshield mount, a CD-slot
mount, and an air-vent mount.
With these tips, you can not only avoid damage for your phone, but you’ll keep yourself and other
drivers safe every time you get behind the wheel. Next, read up on these other places you should
never keep your phone.

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