Friday, October 7, 2016

Replaced the Samsung Galaxy exploded on the aircraft – financial times

An aircraft was during ondagen evacuate at the gate at the Louisville International Airport in Kentucky.

This is then a replaced copy of Samsung’s latest major initiative, the smartphone Galaxy Note 7, started to smoke and burnt marks on board the aircraft.

the Plane was not far from the departure, when the us carrier Southwest on Wednesday morning, local time, evacuated flight 994, from Louisville to Baltimore in the united states. The decision was taken after a smart phone of model Samsung Galaxy Note 7 suddenly started to smoke on board, writes tekniksajten The Verge.

All the passengers and the cabin crew got to leave the plane by the aircraft’s main door and there is no information on any come to harm.

However, it is not the first time a smartphone of this model explodes in a public place. So late last month forced Samsung to withdraw millions of copies of Note 7, only weeks after it was released on the market, writes The Telegraph.

gray-green angry smoke"

Brian Green, owner of the now unusable this thing, said to The Verge that he bought it so late as the 21st of september, that is to say, after that Samsung started selling a new version of the model that reportedly would not have the same battery problem. According to the site, the current phone is not have been affected by the latest recall, then it has already been replaced with a new unit.

Green also tells us that he had the phone turned off on the flight crew’s call and that it was in his pocket when it suddenly began to smoke. He must have lost it on the floor, whereupon a "thick grey-green angry smoke" poured out of it. The phone must then have burned through the carpet in the flygplansgången and made less burn marks in the planet.

Teknikjätten: "there Is no evidence"

Samsung has been following the news about the exploding smartphone gone out with a statement where they say they will examine your device and then go out with more information.
"There is no evidence that this incident is related to the new Note 7. We are now working with the authorities and the Southwest to restore your device and confirm the cause," said teknikjätten.

The u.s. aviation authority recently warned passengers to turn on or recharge their Note 7-phones in-flight, writes The Telegraph.

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