Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Cellphones Transportation

Smoking Smartphone Sparks Emergency Evacuation of Alaska Airlines Jet, Two Taken To Hospital (theregister.com) 113

Passengers escaped an Alaska Airlines jet via emergency slides on Monday night after a malfunctioning smartphone filled the cabin with smoke. The Register reports: The pilot ordered the evacuation of flight 751 from New Orleans to Seattle after someone's cellphone started to spit out sparks and smoke just after landing. As the aircraft was still waiting on the tarmac at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport for a gate, the slides were deployed and all 129 passengers and six crew made it out. The errant mobile was also stuffed in a bag to curb its compact conflagration. Two people, we're told, were taken to hospital.

"The crew acted swiftly using fire extinguishers and a battery containment bag to stop the phone from smoking," a spokesperson for Alaska Airlines told The Register. "Crew members deployed the evacuation slides due to hazy conditions inside the cabin. Two guests were treated at a local area hospital." Airport officials, meanwhile, said "only minor scrapes and bruises were reported."
It's unknown which device malfunctioned on this flight, but it makes us think back to the Galaxy Note 7 fiasco of 2016 that prompted Samsung to formally recall the smartphone after nearly 100 reports of them catching fire and spewing noxious black smoke. The Note 7 was also banned from aircraft in the United States under an emergency order.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Smoking Smartphone Sparks Emergency Evacuation of Alaska Airlines Jet, Two Taken To Hospital

Comments Filter:
  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Thursday August 26, 2021 @05:13AM (#61731369)

    As we all know, every electronic device has smoke stored inside.
    If you release the smoke, you can't put it back in. ;)

    • Mostly correct for most systems.

      But some older computers were stem powered, when the steam got out from the IBM 360, it stopped working..
       

      • Presumably you mean Babbage's differential engine? You know, the one that Ada Lovelace designed?
        • by luvirini ( 753157 ) on Thursday August 26, 2021 @06:30AM (#61731507)

          No, Many early mainframes were water cooled. So we used to joke about the old computers being steam powered and newer smoke powered..

          • Didn't know that! :) Apparently, water/liquid cooling's still popular among gamers.
            • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday August 26, 2021 @08:08AM (#61731773) Homepage Journal

              It's not so much still popular as popular again. Nobody was really water cooling the P54C, even though it needed it even if you weren't overclocking. Computers just cost too much back then to risk them with liquids :) Some of the Cray machines used liquid cooling, and ISTR that one of the later ones even used water, but earlier machines used Flourinert(sp?)

              • It's not so much still popular as popular again.

                Yes and no. I was a watercooler back in the earlier days where PC gaming became popular. It was a pretty sorry sight. You'd attend a large LAN party with several hundred PCs and you'd be lucky if you could find one other person with a watercooled gaming rig, then you'd sit and discuss all the parts you had to make yourself, which fishtank pump you were using, which of the two CPU blocks on the market you were using, and how cool the green shitty car radiator coolant looked flowing through your system.

                These

        • If the bearings run dry, the differential engine could start giving off smoke.

    • I've tried to get mine to quit, but it gets so cranky and puts on weight. Last time it went from an iPhone to an iPhone plus and just wasn't comfortable for me anymore.
    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      As we all know, every electronic device has smoke stored inside.
      If you release the smoke, you can't put it back in. ;)

      Hence FAA regulations prohibit you from releasing the smoke whilst on board this aircraft.

      • As we all know, every electronic device has smoke stored inside. If you release the smoke, you can't put it back in. ;)

        Hence FAA regulations prohibit you from releasing the smoke whilst on board this aircraft.

        And, certainly while the "No Smoking" signs are illuminated ...

    • When an EV goes up in smoke, all the lithium mining trolls come out to play but when a phone/laptop burns nothing is said. Could that be because they own mobile phones and laptops?
  • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Thursday August 26, 2021 @06:03AM (#61731443)

    Completely OT, but why am I getting redirected to mobile.slashdot for this story when my desktop is hardwired?

    • Well, obviously Slashdot wants you to use you phone on the flight for this story so that they have a excuse for dupe when this article is duped in a few days..

    • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

      Just another slashdot fail. They have cnames set up for categories that change themes and one of the categories has the same name as the mobile site. Yeah, I think that's pathetic too. In fact it's even worse than that; one day none of the cnames were working, only slashdot.org, so I wrote a user script to chop the hostnames off. Much better. I liked it so much I wrote another one to redirect to slashdot.org if one should follow a link into the site from elsewhere to cname.slashdot.org. https://greasyfork.o [greasyfork.org]

    • Maybe a cookie expired or something. Just click the link to the full site somewhere at the bottom of the mobile site.
      • Maybe a cookie expired or something. Just click the link to the full site somewhere at the bottom of the mobile site.

        That qualifies for a Whoosh!

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      It's not a mobile site -- there is a site per topic.

      There are also "science.slashdot.org", "."politics.slashdot.org", "games.slashdot.org", "hardware.slashdot.org", etc.
      You can go to one of those sites for only stories within that topic.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        It's not a mobile site -- there is a site per topic.

        There are also "science.slashdot.org", "."politics.slashdot.org", "games.slashdot.org", "hardware.slashdot.org", etc.
        You can go to one of those sites for only stories within that topic.

        And when a site malfunctions (gives a blank page, or other HTTP error), you can delete the site prefix and load it up. The redirect only happens from the front page to a story page - it doesn't redirect if you're go to a story page directly. Some sites are flaky and go down

  • You put your phone in the fire proof lock box before takeoff and pick it up after you have landed. The batteries are just to volatile.
  • If the only reported injuries were minor scrapes and bruises, why go to the hospital? Are they not reporting all injuries, or did people go to the hospital for the hell of it? Like, maybe they couldn't get a hotel room and needed a bed?
    • Ever inhaled the fumes from a burning battery? Non physical injuries aren't sexy so don't often get reported in the news. This is America don't forget, a night at the hospital is more expensive than a night in a RitzCarlton executive suite. .

      • But smoke inhalation is a commonly reported injury...
        • You know what else is commonly reported? Incomplete information.

          We can guess what happened all we want. But I suspect literally every guess is far more likely than "not getting a hotel and instead choosing a hospital".

          I can honestly only summise you've never been to hospital before.

    • If anyone says they are injured, the emergency personnel and the airline will take them to see a doctor right away to a) make sure their injury truly doesn't need treatment and b) document that fact.

    • The absolute worst plane experience I’ve ever had was a dropped bottle of perfume, and I’ve been seated next to a proselytizing fundie in sardine class for 5 hours. It was one of those super cheap but stinky 4oz bottles they used to give our free in business class in the 80s. The fumes were eye watering strong and choking even though it was about 8 rows down and we all had to huff fumes like a spray paint addict for hours, the cabin filters they do nothing! Can’t imagine how much worse
  • I wouldn't be surprised: it's the hottest company ever, hell-bent on taking the market by storm.
  • by Anubis IV ( 1279820 ) on Thursday August 26, 2021 @07:58AM (#61731743)

    This story has been making the rounds for two days already, and every other article I’ve seen led with the info that it was a Samsung Galaxy A21, as stated by officials. The only reason it’s “unknown” is because The Register rushed the article and hasn’t amended it in the two days since. The MacRumors article from about an hour later includes those details, as does all of the reporting from the next day, such as Android Central’s.

    https://www.androidcentral.com... [androidcentral.com]
    https://www.macrumors.com/2021... [macrumors.com]

    • This story has been making the rounds for two days already, and every other article I’ve seen led with the info that it was a Samsung Galaxy A21, as stated by officials.

      Sir, this is Slashdot. If it’s not two days late, short on info, and duped - we want our money back.

    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      Normally if MacRumors said it was a Samsung my immediate assumption would be it was actually a new model iToy.

  • This is a good trick to get out of the plane when they pull their "waiting hours for a gate assignment" BS
  • by drwho ( 4190 )

    If instead we used Lithium iron phosphate batteries (LiFePO4), this wouldn't be a problem. They don't have thermal runaway. They also don't use cobalt, so that eliminates the problems of obtaining it from questionable regimes. It also last longer. So why isn't it used more often? Because LiCoO2 (the standard battery chemistry used in cellphones and in many other portable devices) has 14% more energy density for its first year after manufacture, which allows cell phone manufacturers to advertise the long tim

    • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

      Thats not quite the whole story. Yes, everything you said about LFP batteries is true , however a big downside is that you can fuck up them badly if you discharge them below (according to most sources) 2.5V which doesn't give much of a working voltage range and hence it might only have 80-90% of the energy density of LioN but the usable energy is even lower than that. Having said that I personally think LioN should be dumped ASAP and LFP used instead even if the battery and hence device has to be a bit larg

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Lithium Manganese (LMR) would also be a good choice. They support a high discharge rate and are very difficult to get them to run away (no protection circuit needed). The manufacturers have 2 good choices and one hazardous choice, so guess which one they picked!

    • If instead we used Lithium iron phosphate batteries (LiFePO4), this wouldn't be a problem. They don't have thermal runaway.

      With Chinese patents being up next year have a feeling we will soon be seeing more of this chemistry make their way into products especially EVs.

    • by drwho ( 4190 )

      3 replies, all good, wow you guys are making me have renewed faith in Slashdot. Still trying to figure out why my post gets a score of 1, however.

  • Who thought it was ok to smoke a smartphone when you're not even allowed to smoke a cigarette?
    • It'd be interesting if they can't ID the "smartphone" because it's actually a custom built vaporizer designed to look like a cellphone(probably using the case of one for a disguise). If you can't do it using the cellphone itself, just build it into one of those massive cellphone cases like an otterbox.

      Kind of like how there are a few single-shot pistols disguised as the old brick type cell phones. Of course, those would stand out WORSE than an actual gun these days, and modern cellphones are too thin for

  • Did it not know there is a smoking section?

  • Fascinating that Slashdot seems to be protecting Samsung here.

    According to another source, the firebomb in question was courtesy of a Samsung Galaxy A21.

    https://www.macrumors.com/2021... [macrumors.com]

    The fact that They have not retracted that information since they published it three days ago strongly indicates that the information is correct.

    Censorship on the part of the articleâ(TM)s submitter, or on the part if some /. Editor is totally unacceptable.

    The 3 day delay in publishing is also somewhat suspicious.

    So why

  • When a battery technology needs protective circuitry because they are known to explode in this manner, of course we will have incidents like this, and in a wide range of places.

    Classrooms, offices, houses, inside vehicles, I've heard it all. The only thing that surprises me is that we don't hear about this more often.

    I keep hearing about all of these new safer battery technologies to replace Li-Ion, but I don't hear about any consumer products containing these new batteries, or even a solid proposal for thi

  • Just because there is a bit of technology involved this qualifies the story as yet another slashdot item. I am sorry, but there is just too much political and cultural bullshit on this site these days. Like it wasn't bad enough when the Apple/PC crap was everywhere? Just stick to things that are developer and admin and engineering related. I can go to any news site for the nonsense and righteousness. I come here for tech.
    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      Well, you're in the minority then. I've enjoyed stories about a city in Iran that shuts the streetlights off for star parties, powering a shelter with a locomotive, analysis of Neanderthal DNA, and the theft (and later partial recovery) of a million pounds of maple syrup from the Canadian Strategic Maple Syrup Reserve. More than anything I come for the discussions.

  • The errant mobile was also stuffed in a bag to curb its compact conflagration.

    Nice try, but they should have gone all in: The malfunctioning mobile was stuffed in a satchel to curb its compact conflagration.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

Technology is dominated by those who manage what they do not understand.

Working...