Could smartphones be banned on flights after iPhone 5 catches fire on plane in Tel Aviv?
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The days of taking your iPhone on board during flights could be numbered after a smartphone caught on fire and forced the evacuation of a flight from Tel Aviv.
Passengers were forced to evacuate soon after boarding the plane leaving Israel when smoke from a girl's handbag filled the cabin.
The fire was found to have been caused by iPhone 5 which caught on fire, reported AndroidPortal, forcing the passengers to disembark before the flight left for Prague.
The father of the phone's owner, Yarden Leviovej, told Nova TV (as translated by iClarified): 'My daughter opened her purse, from which we saw the flames and the heat radiating from it.'
Fire call: What an iPhone looks like after it catches fire, as happened when a blazing smartphone (not the one pictured) forced the evacuation of a Prague-bound flight from Tel Aviv aiport
After the source of the flames and smoke was established, and the cabin cleared, the flight was reboarded and on its way. However Yarden, who was travelling with her family, had to leave without her burned out smartphone.
In July, the Civil Aviation Authority made a series of videos about the dangers of and risks associated with the transportation of lithium batteries, the power source of most personal electronic devices that would be used by travellers.
The videos, in conjunction with the US's Federal Aviation Administration, are aimed at airline and airport staff, cargo handlers, check-in staff and cabin crew, and explain the increased fire risk that comes with lithium batteries on passenger and cargo planes.
The CAA explains that 'although lithium batteries are very safe, their high energy levels mean they can pose a fire risk if damaged.'
'As a result they must be treated with care and stowed appropriately during flight.'
In-flight entertainment: An iPhone similar to the one which caught alight, likely due to a faulty battery
The use of items such as smartphones and tablets is only set to increase as airlines increasingly begin to offer on-board WiFi as part of their on-board entertainment.
It is the International Civil Aviation Organisation which sets the worldwide guidelines for dangerous goods, with lithium batteries a common cause for concern in their publicly available literature.
Current rules allow passengers to carry mobile phones, laptops, tablets, cameras and equipment in their carry on and hold luggage, but new security restrictions demand they be charged and able to be powered up on request.However, spare lithium batteries such as those used invideo cameras must be taken in carry on.
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