Samsung Galaxy Note 7 banned on all U.S. flights due to fire hazard
Skip Ad Ad Loading... x Embed x Share The Transportation Department announced Friday it is banning Samsung Galaxy Note 7 phones from all airline flights.USA TODAYA United Airlines warning at Chicago's O'Hare airport on Sept. 25, 2016, about not turning on or charging Samsung Galaxy Note 7 phones during a flight.(Photo: Bart Jansen, USA TODAY)Samsung Galaxy Note 7 phones will be banned from all airline flights after nearly 100 incidents of the devices overheating and sometimes injuring owners, the Transportation Department announced Friday.The Federal Aviation Administration previously urged travelers not to turn on the phones, pack them in checked luggage or charge them during a flight.
Bart Jansen
US bans Samsung Galaxy Note 7 phones from airliners
Passengers and flight crews will be banned from bringing Samsung Galaxy Note 7 smartphones on airline flights under an emergency order issued Friday by the Department of Transportation in response to reports of the phones catching fire.The order, which goes into effect on Saturday at noon EDT, says the phones may not be carried on board or packed in checked bags on flights to and from the United States or within the country.The phones also can't be shipped as air cargo.Passengers caught attempting to travel with the phones will have the phones confiscated and may face fines, the department said.Samsung has recalled more than 2.5 million of the smartphones, citing a battery manufacturing error.The South Korean company discontinued the product earlier this week, less than two months after its August release.The Consumer Product Safety Commission says there have been nearly 100 reports of batteries in Note 7 phones overheating in the U.S. One fire erupted on a Southwest Airlines flight earlier this month.In another case, a family in St. Petersburg, Florida, reported a Galaxy Note 7 phone left charging in their Jeep caught fire, destroying the vehicle.The Federal Aviation Administration had previously warned passengers not to pack the phones in their checked bags and to power them off and not charge them while on board planes.
Joan Lowy

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