Are Cell Phones Really Dangerous to Planes?

Tue Jan 22, 2008 11:21AM EST

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As Salon's Patrick Smith notes, "Few rules are more confounding to airline passengers than those regarding the use of cellphones and portable electronic devices." I'd add the quart-sized plastic bag to that list, but I digress: Smith is right. Is it really true that something as innocuous as a Treo left on in row 32 could cause a jumbo jet to go down in flames? Let's ask Smith himself: He isn't just a pundit, he's a commercial pilot as well.

Part of the issue regarding stowing electronics at takeoff and landing, says Smith, has nothing to do with the fabled "interference," but rather that they can be dangerous as impromptu projectiles in the event of a sudden stop. Just ask the lady who decided to leave her tray table down and a full cup of Coke on it during my recent return flight from Vegas. Amazingly, it didn't stay where she wanted it to.

That aside, what happens in the cockpit when you forget to shut your phone down during takeoff? Most likely: Nothing. But interference is possible. Smith doesn't use this analogy, but try putting your cell phone next to a cheap PC speaker and turn up the volume. You will probably note an occasional, rapid, syncopated beeping coming from the computer speaker. If you've ever heard this before and wondered what it was, now you know: That's interference between the two devices.

Now an airplane is considerably more complicated than a $10 speaker, so the stakes are much higher should interference occur. But as Smith notes, airplanes are also designed to take this kind of interference into account. Smith himself says that he's never noted anything on the flight deck that might have been caused by a cell phone, but how would he know. Airplanes exhibit brief, oddball glitches all the time, and usually no one ever knows what the source was. (All that aside, at least two major incidents, including one crash, have been blamed on cell phones, though neither has been proven.)

The airlines don't really seem to care too much about the cell phone rule: Smith estimates that about half of all cell phones are left on during flight. My personal experience observing other passengers validates this.

Smith wisely notes that one big reason for the cell phone rules is that the potential for danger of phones ensures that people won't demand to use them in flight. Most fliers, as we know, despise this idea, but serial chatters are far more, ahem, vocal about the issue. No one wants a war over technology at 35,000 feet. Those days, however, are already arriving in Europe, as onboard cellular systems have already been approved. Will the U.S. see the same? Smith feels it's inevitable, and he's probably right.

LINK: Are cellphones dangerous to flight? 

Comments on Are Cell Phones Really Dangerous to Planes?

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  • 26 Posted by gentlestench on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:07PM EDT Report Abuse

    Merely by oversight on a stressful business trip I left my phone on in my coat pocket in the overhead bin. I only noticed it when it was time to de-plane...after a successful landing. Because of that I always wondered about that rule.

  • 27 Posted by chuck_p777 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    If they were dangerous terrorists would just put 50 of them in checked baggage.

  • 28 Posted by jayvoit on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:29PM EDT Report Abuse

    Have to keep in mind that there are a lot of "older" planes out there built in the 60s and 70s when cell phones were never around. They still operate with older, possibly outdated equipment so it is feasible, albeit unlikely, that a cell phone would cause severe interference. So on the off chance that it COULD cause a problem, why not just ban them from use (as they do now). Better safe than sorry. If it's an emergency, you can always use the AirFone in your seat at a rate of about $6 per minute :-)

  • 30 Posted by groverfarmerisgay on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:13PM EDT Report Abuse

    hi im grover where do u get acess to a mp4?me daughter wonnta onea ima goina goa nowa\ okayo

  • 31 Posted by advisor666 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:46PM EDT Report Abuse

    "Usama great Sheik we are making the final turn!" But seriously folks teh 911 victims at least got to say their last words and the Shanksville guys were warned

  • 32 Posted by zx7ttd on Fri Jan 25, 2008 12:16PM EST Report Abuse

    i still won't turn my phone off. i'll take my chances. yours too.

  • 33 Posted by dankysar on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    I have a close friend who is a commercial airline pilot. In addition to the "flying object hazard", he says that cell phones cause noise in their headsets and it's annoying, but that there is no threat to the plane's systems.

  • 34 Posted by itsjustsex83 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    OMG, PLEASE Don't add annoying cell phone talkers to all the other things that make flights barely tolerable already!

  • 35 Posted by georgefromely on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:07PM EDT Report Abuse

    I have to disagree...in a Cessna 172 my Garmin nav kept powering down. I couldn't figure it out until my brother shut his phone off and then the the Nav stayed on.

  • 36 Posted by m_j_boisvert on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:32PM EDT Report Abuse

    FOR EJC_99, I'm sure the over weight people not only love being stuck in a small seat for hours on end but they get the pleasure of sitting next to a wonderful person such as your self! Get a clue!

  • 37 Posted by ledhead426 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    guys... if you have a wireless keyboard/mouse set on your PC, try setting 2 or 3 cell phones all around it and then start up active text/multimedia conversations with the three all around. while all this is going on, type out your thesis and move the mouse around. notice what happens. the interference is real. the more devices you have going, the worse it gets. please everybody for the sake of yourself and everyone around you keep the cell phones and PDAs off during the flight.

  • 38 Posted by pilottim79 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:12PM EDT Report Abuse

    I am a Pilot, and work for Trans States Airlines. Everytime someone leaves their phone on I can hear that high pitched beeping the article talks about in my headset. So if you want to use your phone and run the risk that I don't hear the ground clearances correctly go ahead, or you can just ignore the rules and put us all in danger. However you want.

  • 39 Posted by prestigeautogallery on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:18PM EDT Report Abuse

    TRUE STORY. In the early 1990's I was a passanger in a single engine plane flying at 10,000ft. I dialed a number on my cell phone and when I hit send the plane which was on auto pilot started decending. The auto pilot disengaged and the pilot and I tried it several times and each time it decended. BUT that was 15 or so years ago.

  • 40 Posted by thebarontheavedj on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:02PM EDT Report Abuse

    So turn your phone off for a few hours. Big deal. That is what voice mail is for. 20 years ago, the cell phone wasn't even an option...

  • 41 Posted by mrfredeisenlohr on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    This an FCC rule . The airlines just try and enforce it as required by law. Lawsuits you know. But believe me you....if this were a vital issue, phones would be collected from passengers before boarding the plane. let that action serve as your answer ......you can leave your phone on....all will be fine.

  • 42 Posted by mshcg on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:29PM EDT Report Abuse

    Presuming they do not interfere with the plain electronics, I still do not want to be disturbed by the 5 people around me having largely mindless conversations...unless of course we now that the TALKING and NON-TALKING sections as we did with smoking. Let one part of the plane jabber themselves into a frenzy and leave those of us who would like to unwind alone.

  • 43 Posted by c17ldmstr on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:16PM EDT Report Abuse

    The primary reason for turning off portable electronic devices during critical phases of flight (takeoff, landing) is so the flight crew can maintain your attention in case of an emergency. As for cellphones, it is simply an annoyance to the aircrew who are wearing communication headsets. As an aircrew member, that "rapid, syncopated beeping" is extremely distracting.

  • 44 Posted by moorestephen@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:26PM EDT Report Abuse

    I can not imagine how horrible a flight would be if cell phones were allowed. YAK YAK YAK would drive me crazy. Do we really need to be availble 24 7? Heck I enjoy not being able to be reached, gives me time to THINK again...or read...anything but YAK YAK YAK....

  • 45 Posted by moorestephen@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:26PM EDT Report Abuse

    I can not imagine how horrible a flight would be if cell phones were allowed. YAK YAK YAK would drive me crazy. Do we really need to be availble 24 7? Heck I enjoy not being able to be reached, gives me time to THINK again...or read...anything but YAK YAK YAK....

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