Global Times

Headphone batteries explode on Aussie flight

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A woman whose headphones caught fire on a plane suffered burns to her face and hands, Australian officials said Wednesday as they warned about the dangers of batteryope­rated devices in- flight.

The passenger was listening to music on her own batteryope­rated headphones as she dozed about two hours into the trip from Beijing to Melbourne on February 19 when there was a loud explosion.

“As I went to turn around I felt burning on my face,” she told the Australian Transport Safety Bureau ( ATSB) which investigat­ed the incident.

“I just grabbed my face which caused the headphones to go around my neck. I continued to feel burning so I grabbed them off and threw them on the floor.

“They were sparking and had small amounts of fire.”

Flight attendants rushed to help and poured a bucket of water on the headphones, but the battery and its cover had both melted and stuck to the floor.

Pictures show the woman, who was not named, with a blackened face and neck and blisters on her hands.

Fellow passengers had to endure the smell of melted plastic, burnt electronic­s and singed hair for the remainder of the flight.

The transport safety bureau, which did not identify the airline or brand of headphones involved in the incident, said the lithium- ion batteries in the device likely caught fire.

“As the range of products using batteries grows, the potential for in- flight issues increases,” it said, adding that such devices needed to be stored safely if they were not being used.

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