auskiwiflyer
Junior Member
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2011
- Posts
- 43
This laptop travel ban makes me feel less safe as a frequent flyer
How many times have you been using your laptop in the airport or at home and when you finish what you are doing you close the screen to put the laptop to sleep then sometime later you take the laptop out and discover it's burning hot almost to the point of catching fire inside your laptop bag? This is because it did not go to sleep as you thought it would and has furiously been trying to keep itself cool in a very well insulated environment.
I have no doubt that this situation could lead to laptop batteries igniting, because when this has happened to me in the past my laptop is been too hot to touch.
Because of this, I worry when flying that my laptop may not be shut down properly and so I always double check before boarding a flight that it is not on or warm.
Before this ban, I had comfort in the knowledge that should someone else not be so diligent, at least the fact that the laptop is in the cabin with the passengers all around would likely mean a fire is detected and extinguished before getting out of control.
By this ban, Trump is suddenly putting most laptops inside cargo holds. Make no mistake a significant number of these will not shut down as assumed when their screens are closed by their owners, and this will result in hundreds of laptops a day being flown around the world at temperatures above 100°C inside cargo holds.
Hopefully this will result in users arriving at their destination simply with a flat battery when they knew that it was fully charged before the flight, but my very legitimate fear is that the risk of a plane being brought down by fire in the hold is many multiples times higher than the likelihood of a terrorist bomb being an in a laptop carried in the cabin.
A380s hold 450+ passengers and I would say at least 50% of those would have either a tablet or laptop with them, so I ask you, which feels safer. An A380 with 220 or more Laptops & Tablets hidden away in the cargo hold or one with these 220 or more devices in seat pockets, overhead bins or on tray tables in close proximity to human noses and eyes?
There are plenty of other reasons why this ban is ill conceived, but this one, surely cannot be overlooked by anyone with common sense. After all, there is a reason why (rightly so) airlines ask you at check in if your checked baggage has any lithium ion batteries, they are a known fire hazard.
How many times have you been using your laptop in the airport or at home and when you finish what you are doing you close the screen to put the laptop to sleep then sometime later you take the laptop out and discover it's burning hot almost to the point of catching fire inside your laptop bag? This is because it did not go to sleep as you thought it would and has furiously been trying to keep itself cool in a very well insulated environment.
I have no doubt that this situation could lead to laptop batteries igniting, because when this has happened to me in the past my laptop is been too hot to touch.
Because of this, I worry when flying that my laptop may not be shut down properly and so I always double check before boarding a flight that it is not on or warm.
Before this ban, I had comfort in the knowledge that should someone else not be so diligent, at least the fact that the laptop is in the cabin with the passengers all around would likely mean a fire is detected and extinguished before getting out of control.
By this ban, Trump is suddenly putting most laptops inside cargo holds. Make no mistake a significant number of these will not shut down as assumed when their screens are closed by their owners, and this will result in hundreds of laptops a day being flown around the world at temperatures above 100°C inside cargo holds.
Hopefully this will result in users arriving at their destination simply with a flat battery when they knew that it was fully charged before the flight, but my very legitimate fear is that the risk of a plane being brought down by fire in the hold is many multiples times higher than the likelihood of a terrorist bomb being an in a laptop carried in the cabin.
A380s hold 450+ passengers and I would say at least 50% of those would have either a tablet or laptop with them, so I ask you, which feels safer. An A380 with 220 or more Laptops & Tablets hidden away in the cargo hold or one with these 220 or more devices in seat pockets, overhead bins or on tray tables in close proximity to human noses and eyes?
There are plenty of other reasons why this ban is ill conceived, but this one, surely cannot be overlooked by anyone with common sense. After all, there is a reason why (rightly so) airlines ask you at check in if your checked baggage has any lithium ion batteries, they are a known fire hazard.