Mark Rejhon
Member
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2003
- Messages
- 355
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- 10
While happens, this is an exaggeration. It's mostly myth.Another driving hazard to cell phones is people fueling at gas pumps and also talking or texting on their phones despite the warning signs against it.
Every summer, many users of cell phones spark lethal explosions at gas stations.
Only a few per decade, actually - according to Internet sources.
A normal legal HandsFree system is actually more lethal than the once-every-few-years cellphone-initiated explosion in the US. Far more people died from distractions with legal handsfree phone systems today. New cellphones have been made much safer, although sparks can come such safer phones from a malfunctioning cellphone-vibrate motor, to things like dropping a phone and the battery popping out and short circuiting, or malfunctions in a phone severe enough to cause it to overheat. Also, remember how 1990's cellphones tended to heat up, and most modern 2007-era phones don't even get warm to the touch?
Also, most of the gas station explosions come cause from static electricity shocks touching the car when people are getting into and out of their car, not by cellphones. This has been proven as fact.
Yes you are right that at least a few phones contributed (I can only find about three worldwide in the last 10 years)
Still better safe to be sorry, but I take issue with your use of word "many".
Please give me proof of 10 links to cellphone explosions in USA during the last year -- I bet you won't find any.
Good research on Google:
cellphone explosions gas station - Google Search
Interesting tidbit: Mythbusters also tested this [YouTube link] - "BUSTED!". They also agree with this, as being highly unlikely. Text for deafies: [Mythbusters episode2].
People like you complained to Mythbusters. They even revisted it in Episode 14, and was "BUSTED!" again.
(Mind you, though, I tend to trust more rigorous scientific testing though than Mythbusters, than television testing, but Mythbusters is still an interesting footnote here.)
Conclusion: Since it has happened only a few times in 10 years and none recently, it's pratically a non-hazard among 300 million Americans. You are more likely to be struck by lightning.
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