Samsung phone fire blamed in evacuation of Southwest flight; device was a replacement Galaxy Note 7 that had been powered down

“Southwest Airlines evacuated 75 passengers from a flight preparing to take off from Louisville Airport in Kentucky after smoke from a Samsung Galaxy phone filled the cabin,” Daniel Eran Dilger reports for AppleInsider. “The phone was a replacement Galaxy Note 7 that had been powered down for takeoff.”

“According to a report by The Verge, the Galaxy Note 7 owner, Brian Green, said that his phone had been replaced by AT&T a week earlier as part of Samsung’s recall,” Dilger reports. “The replacement model featured the distinctive green battery icon indicating it was a fixed model deemed ‘safe’ by Samsung.”

” The FAA has issued guidelines that specifically name Samsung Galaxy phones as a fire hazard that should not be plugged in or charged during flight,” Dilger reports. “Green reported that he had powered down the Samsung Galaxy phone when requested by flight crew, but that the device began smoking while in his pocket. He dropped the phone to the ground and said that it began emitting ‘thick gray-green angry smoke.'”

MacDailyNews Take: Make that karmically-angry smoke.

“Green reported that he had only ever used a wireless induction charger to recharge the device, and that it was about 80 percent charged when the fire occurred,” Dilger reports. “The Verge noted that “Green’s Note 7 is in the hands of the Louisville Fire Department’s arson unit for investigation. He has already replaced it with an iPhone 7.””

Read more in the full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: We picture beleaguered Samsung lying beaten in a ditch with Karma showing up right after breakfast, lunch, and dinner in order to deliver another swift kick in the teeth. The vision makes us feel all warm and toasty inside. 🙂

FOAD, slavish copier. FOAD.

Jeep charging a Samsung Galaxy Note 7 (left) and a Jeep charing an Apple iPhone (right)
Jeep charging a Samsung Galaxy Note 7 (left) and a Jeep charging an Apple iPhone (right)

 

Garage charging a Samsung Galaxy Note 7 (left) and a garage charging an Apple iPhone (right)
Garage charging a Samsung Galaxy Note 7 (left) and a garage charging an Apple iPhone (right)

 
SEE ALSO:
52% of Chinese consumers shun exploding, fire-prone Samsung phones; 37% want to upgrade to Apple iPhone instead – October 3, 2016
Chinese state TV slams Samsung over exploding Galaxy phone recall discrimination – September 30, 2016
Exploding phone maker Samsung faces U.S. probe over ‘exploding washing machines’ – September 29, 2016
Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge phone sparks house fire in Ohio – September 29, 2016
U.S. regulators warn customers about exploding Samsung washing machines – September 28, 2016
More Samsung phone recall victims to switch to Apple’s iPhone than those who’ll risk another Samsung – September 28, 2016
Higher income U.S. states use Apple iPhones; lower income states use Samsung Galaxy phones – September 27, 2016
Samsung phone explodes, bursts into flame in China; more extensive safety recalls may be required – September 27, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung: 40% of potentially dangerous exploding phones still out there in U.S. and South Korea – September 27, 2016
Cramer: Apple has opportunity for enormous market share right now – September 27, 2016
Are Samsung’s Galaxy S7 Edge smartphones catching fire too? – September 26, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung’s replacement phones have battery problems, too – September 26, 2016
Samsung phone catches fire in mid-air aboard Singapore-Chennai IndiGo flight – September 23, 2016
Three Samsung phones erupt into fire in China, but no Chinese recall, yet – September 21, 2016
35% of those stuck with Samsung’s explosive Galaxy Note 7 want a refund, 26% want to upgrade to Apple’s iPhone 7 – September 20, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung has a ticking time bomb on its hands – September 19, 2016
Backfire: Beleaguered Samsung’s exploding phones triggered by rush to beat Apple’s iPhone 7 – September 19, 2016
Florida man sues beleaguered Samsung after phone explodes in pocket – September 17, 2016
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission issues formal recall of beleaguered Samsung’s exploding phones – September 15, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung phones unwelcome on NYC’s buses and trains – September 15, 2016
Samsung Galaxy Note 7 owners are ignoring the explosions, fires and safety warnings – September 15, 2016
Samsung Galaxy S7 phone explodes in teacher’s hands in the middle of busy cafe – September 14, 2016
Samsung phone blows up in car passenger seat, causes huge highway explosion – September 14, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung to issue desperate kludge in attempt to contain the exploding phone crisis – September 13, 2016
Man sues beleaguered Samsung after exploding Galaxy S7 Edge causes massive 3rd degree burns – September 13, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung phone explodes in little boy’s hands, 6-year-old suffers burns – September 12, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung sheds $26 billion in value after massive recall of explosive, dangerous, flawed Galaxy Note 7 – September 12, 2016
FAA warns airline passengers not to use Samsung phones – September 9, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung’s exploding Galaxy Note 7 destroys garage; home condemned due to fire – September 9, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung’s exploding Galaxy Note 7 destroys Florida man’s Jeep – September 8, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung’s exploding Galaxy Note 7 burns down garage; destroys Jeep in another case; airlines now banning potentially deadly device – September 8, 2016
Apple orders more parts for iPhone 7 amid Samsung recalls – September 6, 2016
Exploding Samsung Galaxy Note 7 damages Perth hotel room – September 6, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung blows it in rush to beat Apple iPhone 7 to market – September 6, 2016
Apple stock up, may benefit from beleaguered Samsung’s exploding Galaxy devices – September 2, 2016
Beleaguered Samsung to recall 2.5 million Galaxy Note 7 units over exploding batteries – September 2, 2016
Samsung may be forced to recall Galaxy Note 7 over exploding batteries – September 1, 2016
Samsung halts Galaxy Note 7 shipments due to battery explosions – August 31, 2016

34 Comments

    1. A lot of airplay in Oz since Choice Magazine has brought out it’s annual “shonky” awards and prominent amongst them are Samsung phones and dishwashers complete with “after” photographs. Now you can add an additional BOOM!

      1. Just an honest question here: seriously, what would happen if you ran a Samsung Note 7 through a Samsung washing machine? Could it cause universal implosion? The end of existence itself?

        Why the living fuck is nobody talking about this potentially universe-ending confluence of destructive forces beyond our comprehension?

        Again, not trying to be divisive or rabble-rousing. Just wondering. 🙂

  1. This is attempted murder of 75+ souls. Samsung knows their devices continue to have issues and the airlines know that Samsung devices can not be trusted on planes.

    This makes me never want to fly again.

  2. Thats incredibly dangerous for these things to be exploding while powered off. A blanket ban on all Samsung devices from flying would be the best measure at this point. Karma you are a wonderful sweet force that is righting the wrongs this company has wrought, please continue with your retribution but without hurting anyone or bringing down a plane. Although Samsung phones continuing to explode is always a welcome story.

    1. It’s obviously a DESIGN flaw, NOT a defective battery. This is more proof…

      Previous proof – Samsung issued a software update that limits battery charging to 60% as alternative to replacing phone. How could THAT be a “fix” if cause was defective battery?

      Bottom line. Using a different battery (with a “distinctive green battery icon”) won’t make it safe. Scrap the design or continue to put lives at risk.

  3. MDN is cracking jokes, but this is what an ACTUAL product fiasco looks like. Not buggy mapping software, not a dozen or so units that bend in users’ back pockets, but devices that actually ignite during normal operation, and create scenarios that put lives at risk.

    Tim Cook formally apologized and fired Scott Forstall over a poor mapping software release, and what has Samsung management done in this much more serious case? Released a hack patch to limit charging, and reissued new phones that apparently still catch fire. It is a disgrace that tech pundits haven’t taken Samsung to task.

  4. It it makes their Samsung VR device even more disturbing. If you want to make your face look like something out of a Francis Bacon painting, go ahead, but until something is done about this, then their phones should be banned for a while. I just can’t imagine this happening while it is attached to those headsets. It’s horrible.

  5. Don’t want innocent victims made of SamSplode’s folly and inept tech. Especially on a plane with huge potential casualty numbers. Banning them altogether would seem to be a sensible precaution. At this point the Galaxy Note 7 is a complete fiery bust. You couldn’t ask for worse PR – not that it might not work or work well but that it might actually KILL you!

  6. It was a REPLACEMENT SamSplode.

    The worst possible scenario has now begun.

    Samsung must be on antidepressants at this point and wearing Depends.™ 💊💊💊💊💊💊

    It’s a party. 🍾🍻👶💸🔊🖕🤑🎊🎉🎂🎁🎄🎅🎃🎧🎤🎶👌👍

  7. Remember how Samsung jumped all over Apple for bend-gate? Notice how Apple keeps it classy by not poking fun at the massive public safety risk that is Samsung? But for real, Apple should offer $250 for any recalled Samsung towards an iPhone 7. They can do it in the name of charity and public safety and be a real hero.

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