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To: Swordmaker

Apple and batteries catching on fire has been a problem with Apple since almost forever. This is not a new problem for Apple


32 posted on 10/21/2016 7:41:04 PM PDT by arl295
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To: arl295
Apple and batteries catching on fire has been a problem with Apple since almost forever. This is not a new problem for Apple

Sources? The. Lithium batteries have always had an issue with exothermic events. It's a flaw in the current technology.

Personally, I have high hopes for SolidEnergy. The 2016 capacity has been take. By the US Govt for drone use. 2017 is the year they expand to cell phones and 2018 they move to automobiles.

37 posted on 10/21/2016 7:57:48 PM PDT by Hodar (A man can fail many times, but he isn't a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.- Burroughs)
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To: arl295

I have to jump in on this. I was a happy owner of a Note 7, I swapped it out for a S7 Edge.

The N7 was an amazing device that got hamstrung by its battery. Was is poor design or poor quality control? Who knows.

But all smartphones with Li Ion batteries have the potential to catastrophically fail.

The N7 had a higher than normal failure rate and Samsung issued the recall. But by doing so they also opened Pandora’s Box.

We live in a very ligatious society, insurance fraud is rampant. The media for a few days replaced Trump with the Note 7 and the most despised & dangerous thing on the planet. And as any Freeper knows, once the media gets on their narrative kick, they will ride that horse into the ground. And not to get any Apple fans in a twist, I would not be surprised if Apple didn’t offer some $ to keep the media on the heels of their #1 competitor.

The Note 7 is in the history books. But here is where Pandora’s Box comes in. Be it from design flaw to manufacturing defect to owner mishandling LiOn battery powered smartphones have the potential to thermogenically go up in flames and right now the new iPhone 7 series seem to be in the cross hairs.

I hope the saying “Necessity is the mother of inventions” and Samsung finds either a suitable replacement for Li Io batteries or a better manufacturing process to cut down failures.

When the Note 8 comes out, I will be first in line.


39 posted on 10/21/2016 8:12:25 PM PDT by TheShaz
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To: arl295
Apple and batteries catching on fire has been a problem with Apple since almost forever. This is not a new problem for Apple

Actually, no, it has not. You can count the number of iPhones that have caught fire on the fingers of two hands. Apple instituted a recall of 32,000 batteries for laptops over six overheating Sony made batteries, none caught fire. In the same month, Dell and HP had to recall 360,000 Sony made batteries and some had actually caught fires, causing injury and property damage. Apple got the headlines. When an Apple device does have a problem, it makes headlines. . . but it is a RARE event.

40 posted on 10/21/2016 8:12:58 PM PDT by Swordmaker (This tag line is a Microsoft insult free zone... but if the insults to Mac users continue...)
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