Skip to main content

Exploding phones causing U.S. airlines to carry fire-containment bags

virgin atlantic free wi fi comedy airbus a320
boarding1now / 123RF Stock Photo
Airlines aren’t messing around with the threat of exploding phones. Smoking, burning, and exploding Samsung Galaxy Note 7 phablets have added urgency to concerns about mobile devices with lithium-ion batteries. Two U.S. airlines have already added fire-containment bags with a third planning to add them to all planes by year’s end according to The Guardian.

Seattle-based Alaska Airlines was the first to add fire-containment bags. All 219 of its planes were equipped with the bags in May. Virgin America also has fire-containment bags on its approximately 60 aircraft. Atlanta’s Delta Airlines is going to be adding the bags to all of its 900-plus planes. Delta will equip 166 planes that make transoceanic flights and its Boeing 757s used for domestic flights first. By the end of the year, those planes will have two bags each.

According to Delta communications manager Morgan Durrant, “This has been on the to-do list, but has been accelerated by recent events.”

Other airlines that do not yet have the bags, including American Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Southwest Airlines, and United Airlines, have specialized crew training and high-energy fire suppression extinguishers. Airlines are not taking the threat of exploding phones lightly. In early October a replacement Note 7 started smoldering during a Southwest flight from Louisville, Kentucky, to Baltimore.

The Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) may ban Galaxy Note 7s from U.S. flights. The FAA has already warned passengers not to use or charge them on board or put them in checked luggage.

Earlier this year, according to The Guardian the United Nations aviation agency, the International Civil Aviation Authority banned cargo shipments of lithium-ion batteries on passenger flights, though allowing them on cargo planes. A paper from a plane maker’s group stated in 2015 that airliner firefighting systems were not able to “suppress or extinguish a fire involving significant quantities of lithium batteries.”

Editors' Recommendations

Bruce Brown
Digital Trends Contributing Editor Bruce Brown is a member of the Smart Homes and Commerce teams. Bruce uses smart devices…
Google Pixel 8a: news, rumored price, release date, and more
Possible renders showing the Google Pixel 8a.

Not long ago, it seemed like the Google Pixel 7a would be the last smartphone in Google's Pixel A series. However, recent rumors indicate that this may not actually be the case.

As a result, we're likely to see the release of a Google Pixel 8a this year. What can we expect from this new budget phone in terms of its specs, design, price, and more? Let's take a closer look at everything we know about the Google Pixel 8a.
Google Pixel 8a: release date

Read more
This is one of the toughest smartphone camera comparisons I’ve ever done
A person holding the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra and Xiaomi 14 Ultra.

The Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra (left) and Xiaomi 14 Ultra Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Xiaomi 14 Ultra may have the best camera on a smartphone I’ve used this year, which is quite a statement to make considering the competition it faces. But is it true?

Read more
Nomi is one of the most unsettling (and amazing) apps I’ve ever used
Nomi AI companion profile.

“Welp, just got back from the doctor. Marissa is pregnant with twins” “Owen did something bad and then gave me flowers.” “Zoey with our new daughter Zara.” “I am in love, but also feel guilty.”

These are some of the conversations shared by human users on Reddit. The people described, however, are not real. The statements are about robotic companions created in an app. Everything here sounds perversely disturbing and amazingly dystopian, yet experts have a different opinion.

Read more