Airlines Impose New Restrictions on Batteries

Tue Jan 1, 2008 12:01AM EST

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I'm back! Did ya miss me? Hey, thanks. Let's start off your '08 with some good old-fashioned news about air travel, a big mess of new rules that are sure to confuse and entertain you all year. This time, the FAA has taken aim at lithium batteries, a response to the bevy of exploding laptops that menaced offices and airports alike over the last two years (one of which occured at LAX).

The new rules are confusing and extensive (and are being reported incorrectly in numerous mainstream publications), so I'll try to boil it down for you here, accurately. Hit the link at the end of the story for the entire text of the new rules straight from the horse's mouth. The rules took effect on Jan. 1, 2008.

  • Installed batteries (already in your phone, laptop, camera, etc.) and spare batteries (carried loose) are treated differently. Only lithium-based batteries are concerned here, not nickel-based rechargeables or alkaline batteries.
  • You can't pack spare batteries in checked baggage...but you may check equipment with batteries installed.
  • In your carry-on baggage, you can take as many batteries along as you want (installed or spare), as long as they contain less than 8 grams of lithium content each. How do you know how much lithium is in a battery? An 8-gram battery equals about 100 watt-hours of power. Now, your battery won't say how many watt-hours it provides, but it's easy to do the math. Look on the bottom and you'll find a voltage rating and a mAh (milliamp-hours) rating. Multiply these two together and divide by 1,000. That's your watt-hours. In the (big) battery I'm looking at as an example, it offers 11.1 volts and 7,800 mAh. Multiply and divide by 1,000 and you get 86.58 watt-hours, acceptable under the new rules.
  • Now, you can also bring two spare batteries that break the above rule. These two batteries can have a total lithium content of 25 grams, or about 300 watt-hours. Where might you find such a giant battery? Namely in those third-party laptop battery slabs designed to give you a full day of computing. A product like this Electrovaya PowerPad 300 would just barely make it... but would probably earn you a delay at security.
  • These rules mainly concern lithium-ion batteries. Lithium metal batteries (which are comparably rare) have more stringent rules. Check the link for full details if you use lithium metal batteries, but since lithium metal batteries are usually quite small, there's not that much cause for concern.

Whew! Bottom line: Most travelers are fine as they are now, especially if they don't bring along spare batteries. If you do carry spares, take a look at the FAA's safety tips, which advise placing spare cells in a plastic bag to prevent short circuits. Just make sure those spares aren't too big, and only carry two.

LINK: FAA Battery Rules 2008

Comments on Airlines Impose New Restrictions on Batteries

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  • 66 Posted by ghefy42 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    As I put my daughter on ashort distance flight abaord a 18 pass. plane,(carry-on only,short stay)the TSA boys caught her on some shampoo. They handed it to me, I put it in the small of my back in my elastic shorts and walked right by them. My point being, they don't have a clue, their messing w/ ----- that doesn't matter, and the locals are the one's being terrorized. I hold the record for being searched on Hawaiian inter-island 13 of 14 flights just after 9-11. I'm 5'11" 175pds blonde hair hazel eyes I wore flipflops shorts and a aloha shirt! Can someone tell me whats wrong here?

  • 67 Posted by cceasyrider on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:20PM EDT Report Abuse

    I intend to take a back-up battery for my laptop, and batts for my dig SLR. Anyone think about how quickly you drain a 10.5 megapix camera when shooting RAW at the highest rez? All these new restrictions are laughable. Do I take my own toothpaste and deodorant, or hope that if I have to buy stuff in Costa Rica, that it doesn't contain some frigging antifreeze crap from China?

  • 68 Posted by debra_anderson2 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is going to be hard for my husband and his company. They travel alot using airports as main transportation. They carry on laptops, cell phones, and in thier checked luggage they have battery powered drills and what not. Its bad enough they had to buy special cases for thier tools, with special locks, then on top of it all TSA drops thier spare battiers and cracks them. I think that some of the people on here are correct. we might as well go naked and send our luggage on to other planes, trains, or even buses with out us. then hope and pray that it gets there.

  • 69 Posted by destroyersfrfl on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    So were laptop batteries the secret weapon Al-Quaeda used on 9/11? Unf'n real this nonsense, how about instead of putting a stranglehold on whatever basic liberty we have left, our gov't does it's real job and destroy our enemies... That is how we will be safe... I highly doubt some terrorist was plotting to hijack a 747 with his new DELL LAPTOP because of the exploding battery issue from earlier this year, and now that idea has been thwarted.... More waist of resources on pittiful nonsense....

  • 71 Posted by bwopress on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is ----- retarded..... In plain English.

  • 72 Posted by c.palmer572@btinternet.com on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:16PM EDT Report Abuse

    I an 54 and have flown for the first time last year as i have always been terrified. I have worried over just about everything to do with flying. Now this............and maths.........I think from now on I will stay at home.

  • 73 Posted by nowwicked on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    I enjoy reading peoples rants and raves. Everyone thinks that the US is the only country with seemingly stupid rules about airline flight and that the current administration is the only one that is dumb. If the government did nothing people complain, if the government does something people complain. Everyone thinks they know better than the next guy what is the correct thing to do for security and what is stupid. Why aren't all these know it alls running for government or creating a company to make money off all their extremely great ideas that only they seem to have. Folks, I couldn't take a small bottle of water onto a plane in Japan even though the prior flight gave it to me and it was sealed. Go to Bogota, get your luggage hand searched and your body as well then whine with the guy standing there holding a fully automatic weapon. Get a grip folks. If your ideas are so much better than the ones in place get them recognized. Don't waste your time here on the net complaining.

  • 74 Posted by plcdude9 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:14PM EDT Report Abuse

    What a joke. Lets stay focused people! I believe that TSA could not do the math on how big my battery is or how much lithium is in each battery. Looks like my wifes toys have to stay home !!!!!!!!

  • 75 Posted by blue_rose_13 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:09PM EDT Report Abuse

    THANK God!!!! I feel so much safer now! Can you imagine having your plane burn down just because some stupid batery decided to catch fire in air but didn't do it while in the store or your own house? (Since we're tlaking math, what's the probability of a fire starting because of a battery?) And if anyone was planning an attack, wouldn't it just be easier to use those metal silverware already provided on intercontinental planes than play around with chemicals inside the batteries? Or what about our shoe laces? Can't you strangle someone with those? Maybe we should have our arms cut off and teeth pulled out too (those little things could be dangerous). At least we got our psychic powers... BEWARE!

  • 76 Posted by cinzbenz52 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    Thanks as always for the information. It's good to know the FAA restrictions before getting to the airport.

  • 77 Posted by rickjames_bitch86 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    Okay just to start off all you guys need to stop blaming TSA for all the problems you guys have for going through security, maybe if everybody would follow the rules and not ask the same stupid questions over and over. TSA didn't make up these rules it was the FAA we just enforce them (Current TSA employee). People saying that they don't feel much safer well here are two things about that one. Has there been any recent attacks on America since 9/11? Two. If you think that TSA is so bad I would like to see you guys do a better job than what we already do.

  • 78 Posted by jiml3 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    Are there cases of Li-Ion batteries catching fire when NOT connected to anything? It's odd that the rules allow them if they're in a device, but isn't that the circumstance under which laptops have caught fire?

  • 79 Posted by kerstacaliz on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    This has got to be the dumbest crap I've heard in a while, even from the FAA. It's one thing that they make you take off your shoes (oops, forgot I was wearing my lucky socks with the whole right over my left big toe), run them through an x-ray machine, take your laptop out of it's traveling case, place in it in a bin (by itself of course), remove the 11 cents of spare change from your pocket, fit essential toiletries in a sanwich bag only to realize that your "travel size" bottle of conditioner is actually 4 ounces rather than 3, go through a not so gentle shake down from TSA security personel because I forgot that I had on my fabulous underwire bra that gives me 70% more clevage . . . (i hope you get it by now) -- but to put restrictions on the batteries I'm carrying, that's just absurd!

  • 80 Posted by jonwic on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    This battery business is nothing more than bogus terrorism scare mongering. If you think three people (should have been 4 - flight 93 in PA) hijacked 3 airliners and flew them into their targets with such precision, I have bridge on the moon that's for sale. In other words, the official story of 9/11 is the real conspiracy theory. It's quite laughable. Wake up America. Why did the official 9/11 bogus Commission Report issued on July 22, 2004 ommit testimony from hundreds of eyewitnesses, including firemen, police, and EMS workers who clearly heard bombs in the buildings? Why was Norman Minneta's testimony omitted from the official bogus 9/11 Commission Report? Why was the demolition of building 7 (Solomon Brothers Building) omitted from the official bogus 9/11 Commission Report? Also, isn't it an amazing coincidence that on April 19, 1995 (Oklahoma bombing); September 11, 2001; and July 7, 2005 (London bombings) that military drills were conducted on the exact same targets at the exact same time? Isn't that amazing? Or is it just a coincidence? Oh, don't want to miss this one: google this: Solomon Brothers building collapse reported before it happened. Type this into google and see for yourself. Wake up America. Turn off your TV, put on your thinking cap and get a grip, because heck is on the way. Oh, I'm a negative person. Oh, I don't know how to think positive. Oh yeah, all that New Age phony stuff was actually created by the Scottish Rite of Free Masonry. They actually had a magazine in the 1950's called New Age. Get a grip America. If you decide you don't care, then you may have to pay the piper in the end. In any event, I hope it don't happen. Get real America. Get Real. I have a pilot's license - only to fly Cessna's and I guarantee you that those fools could not have pulled it off. No way. No way. No way. Don't forget to look at the other evidence. John O'Neill Kyle, TX

  • 81 Posted by cw_45 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:33PM EDT Report Abuse

    After a long career in the aviation industry I agree with post #58. It's time to start high speed rail all over this country. Put the -independent of freight traffic- rail lines down the median of every interstate highway. Electrify it from end to end. It would put Americans and American steel and products back to work in this country. In the 1920's, it was a selling point for rail travel that you could go from coast to coast and not walk more than two blocks. Why? Because the interconnectivity of trolley, streetcar, interurban, and main line rail service made it so. When South and Central America and Mexico were all bandits, China was a war lord heaven, and Africa was still cooking missionaries, this country had a transportation infrastructure that has not been met or exceeded. All built with no foreign resources, except the labor provided by those who legally immigrated here. Carl in SC

  • 82 Posted by decate19 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    Does this affect Polymer Lithium ion batteries ?

  • 83 Posted by johnnnyappleseed on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:39PM EDT Report Abuse

    If it's possible for you to believe that we actually landed on the moon, then it is not impossible to guide you towards the fact that this is for the best interest of safety, and to keep you in the realms of fear...for you own good. Cell phones can cause a spark while your gassing up your vehicle...yea sure...my point exactly.

  • 84 Posted by pennihope on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:06PM EDT Report Abuse

    another waste of travellers time 90% of the TSA agents don't know how to spell lithium !

  • 85 Posted by vrgatsunset on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    What do you do where you work Daddy?Oh,I collect flashlight batteries from airline passangers at the airport.LOL

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