Exploding again iPhone in the lead role. A few days ago we informed you about incident, which happened in China. A woman driving on a busy road had her car explode iPhone directly on the dashboard. Today's case is very similar, although older.
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This is an incident from South Carolina where it exploded iPhone to its user directly in their pocket. This happened in the fall of 2016, at a time when the dangers of lithium-ion batteries were being talked about very loudly. Mainly because of the Samsung Note 7. iPhone 6 burned a man so badly that he had to be transported to a burn center in nearby Georgia. Robert Portee, who is involved in the case, was reportedly visiting his son. Shortly after he charged his phone and put it in his pocket, he felt intense heat and his clothes crack.
iPhone 6 has big problems with battery explosions.
Now Portee is demanding compensation from Applu and the company Asurion, which iPhone progave. He states that both companies should be aware of the risk associated with these batteries. He also thinks that they should iPhone should have warned the user when it overheated. Moreover, this is not an isolated case. In addition to the above-mentioned incident in China, for example, an iPhone 6 at a store in Las Vegas, where the device was ready for repair.
It is interesting that the explosions mostly concern the iPhone 6 and we can only hope that AppWe have managed to eliminate their cause and similar problems will not occur in future devices.
The cucumber season will rage on for some time to come. . .
Oh yeah... if 100 pieces show an error out of 10 million devices, we'll call it a problem... and of those 10 (publicized) at least half are still questionable.
Note 7 – it was a mess, this campaign around exploding apples seems exaggerated and artificial to me.
It's not that it's iphone, but the point is that it happens and it shouldn't.
I can't imagine this happening to me, or my children, friends, family.
And it doesn't matter at all that it's 20 pieces out of 100 million.
For me, that's a pretty major problem!!! And I'll only get to that in about Applu…
Um, in that case, they should immediately cancel air traffic, this is about much more human life than burnt legs and arms. And they claim that it is the safest mode of transport. So how?
The point is that if your phone with a thin structure falls to the ground, no matter how high, the risk of damage or even the already mentioned battery explosion increases. can't be surprised.