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Originally posted by: slick230
Originally posted by: bsobel
Originally posted by: upsciLLion
Cell phones generate EMI which could potentially interrupt the normal functioning of the aircraft's electronics. Having people not use them on flights is more than a courtesy issue.
Actually that has never been proven. The main reason for the requirement is from the air your phone can reach many more towers than it can from 'ground level' and is moving much faster than the cell systems are designed to handle.
Bill
So why would the FAA care if your cellphone's carrier can't keep up with your signal? :roll:
A flight attendant told her that she would need to change her seat if she couldn't follow instructions because she was sitting in an emergency exit row, which was open only to people who follow directions
Originally posted by: bsobel
Originally posted by: upsciLLion
Cell phones generate EMI which could potentially interrupt the normal functioning of the aircraft's electronics. Having people not use them on flights is more than a courtesy issue.
Actually that has never been proven. The main reason for the requirement is from the air your phone can reach many more towers than it can from 'ground level' and is moving much faster than the cell systems are designed to handle.
Bill
he said it is more than a courtesy issue...Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: upsciLLion
Cell phones generate EMI which could potentially interrupt the normal functioning of the aircraft's electronics. Having people not use them on flights is more than a courtesy issue.
last time i check its an FAA regulation
I hear what my cell does to my PC's and my car's speakers when it's in use. I can imagine what it might do to a plane's electronics.
Originally posted by: royaldank
You phone isn't going to do anything to the plane's capacity to fly. Using a cell phone at a gas pump isn't going to start a fire, either. Both are common misconceptions.
Although no real deaths have yet occurred, enough scary incidents have taken place that at least some hospitals have banned the use of cell phones on their premises, or at least in their trauma, critical care, and surgical areas. Cell phone interference has created false alarms in infant incubators and prompted heart monitors to spew results making it appear as if patients hooked up to them were in cardiac arrest. It has set off fire alarms and caused IV pumps to stop working. Worse, it has caused failures in some equipment necessary for the maintenance of life itself. For instance, at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, a breathing machine for infants sputtered to a halt when a worker switched on a cellular telephone while medical equipment was being tested. That there was no baby attached to that gizmo at that time doesn't mean that a similar failure couldn't have happened when an infant's every breath was on the line.
In another incident reported on the FDA web site:
A patient in the intensive care unit was receiving epinephrine by an infusion pump when a visitor received a cell phone call. When the phone was answered, the infusion pump increased the rate of the drip. The patient received an unintended bolus of medication and subsequently developed epinephrine toxicity.
Originally posted by: royaldank
You phone isn't going to do anything to the plane's capacity to fly. Using a cell phone at a gas pump isn't going to start a fire, either. Both are common misconceptions.
