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View Full Version : E-cig catches fire in pax bag at Bradley airport


jugofpropwash
17th Mar 2017, 04:08
E-cigarette catches fire inside passenger bag at Bradley Airport | WTNH Connecticut News (http://wtnh.com/2017/03/16/e-cigarette-catches-fire-inside-passenger-bag-at-bradley-airport/)

Pugilistic Animus
17th Mar 2017, 05:41
Well I guess they will now be banned instantly or not.

westhawk
17th Mar 2017, 07:32
Along with all other devices utilizing lithium batteries? My cell phone has gotten uncomfortably hot a few times. In fact it gave new meaning to the term "hot pockets"! However in my experience, turning it OFF reverses the temperature trend. As for the vape devices, some are engineered and built better than others. As well, some users are known to modify the heating coils on their devices to increase heat and therefore vapor output. This increases current demand on the battery, making it more vulnerable to overheating.

Whatever the case, there well may be some calls to ban vape devices on airplanes even though that may open a big can of worms with respect to all lithium battery equipped devices. The vape industry may have shot themselves in the foot when they promoted all those awful "flavors" that leave one yearning for the smell of ordinary tobacco smoke. I don't care whether they ban them or not, but people who don't like them will use this to get rid of them while they get to keep their entertainment devices.

ExXB
17th Mar 2017, 12:20
It is usually low quality, mass market devices that are to blame. And, too often, devices that have been 'hacked' by the user to 'improve' the experience.

Recent reports had a pair of headphones 'explode' and seriously burn a passenger. Likely not hacked but could be the quality.

Unhacked ecigs are no more dangerous than other cheap devices. Ecigs are also a useful tool to assist addicts come clean. I doubt, however, that bubblegum flavours do anything other than encourage children to move money from their wallets to the wallets of legal drug pushers.