Cell phone cooks up trouble

sara1981

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Cell phone cooks up trouble
Brooklyn man's cell phone cooks up trouble - 8/17/09 - New York News and Tri-State News - 7online.com

NEW YORK (WABC) -- Andrei Melnikov has a cell phone with a feature he didn't bargain for-- it can turn on his stove.

When Melnikov is about two feet away from his Magic Chef stove, incoming calls on his PDA make the appliance beep. Then the digital display lights up, indicating the stove's broiler is on high. Sure enough, when he pops open the door, the burners are aflame.

It happened for the first time last week. The phone rang, and while Melnikov was talking, he smelled smoke. Thinking it was one of the other electronic devices in his Brooklyn apartment, he went around and checked them first.

At that point, the kitchen was filling with smoke and Melnikov ran inside and found the cause. It was the oven, which he knew he hadn't turned on. Inside was a piece of plastic cookware that was on fire. Melnikov quickly put it out.

Melnikov remembered he was on the phone when the fire started, so he did a test on his cell and figured out what had happened

Melnikov has had the PDA three years and says this is the first time it turned on his oven. Even still, he's shaken and says he can't sleep knowing it just might happen again. He and his wife have pet chinchillas and are thankful that Melnikov didn't leave the apartment while the oven was cooking.

For now, the stove is unplugged until needed, and Melnikov has been in touch with Maytag, the maker of the appliance. The company says it will send out a repair team to try and sort everything out.
 
Weird... kitchen stuff being controlled wirelessly?
 
It's doubtful that the cell phone radio waves are doing it, or else it would happen all the time. It's most likely the phone itself. For instance, years ago, I could make my computer monitor (non-flat screen) go on a fritz for a moment whenever my pager went off - and it was pretty close to the screen. I at once would know the phone went off without feeling the vibration of the pager. However, that certainly wasn't any good for the monitor!

I imagine it's the same with the stove - something is shorting or otherwise being manipulated by a part in the cell phone. Cell phones vibrate by having a series of magnets shake a moving part - those magnets could just as well affect other electrical components nearby.
 
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