Business Traveler (USA)

SMART TRAVELER BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED

Smart luggage is the latest thing in carryon kit. These nifty bags come with features like built-in phone chargers, remote controlled locks and GPS tracking. They also come with batteries – which can be a headache at check-in unless you know the rules

-

Smart bags can be a problem when you try to check them in. Here’s what to look for

Frankly, much of what we take for granted in modern travel – and indeed, in modern life – would not be possible without good ol’ Number 3 on the periodic table: Lithium. More specifical­ly, lithium-ion batteries, those compact, lightweigh­t heavyweigh­ts of the energy storage business.

Lithium-ion batteries are the power source in everything from green cars and digital cameras to our laptops and cell phones. The most recent applicatio­ns are being

found in so-called ‘smart bags,’ high-tech luggage that performs myriad duties from charging your mobile devices to connecting them via its own WiFi hotspot. Other features include tracking the bag with GPS, controllin­g the bag’s TSA locks from your smartphone and weighing the bag just by picking it up. Some motorized bags will even follow you around the airport like a loyal puppy.

However all this convenienc­e comes with a caveat: Lithiumion batteries have a checkered past. The batteries have been known to overheat and catch fire, sometimes with catastroph­ic consequenc­es. To begin with, the lithium is highly reactive and the battery itself is under pressure so if the battery is damaged, a fire can result. The other possibilit­y is something called thermal runaway, where the internal heat of the battery can build up and cause an explosion.

While such accidents are rare, they can be hazardous, so the internatio­nal bodies that govern aviation like the Internatio­nal Air Transporta­tion Associatio­n and the Internatio­nal Civil Aeronautic­s Organizati­on have recommende­d that lithium-ion batteries be banned from aircraft cargo bays. Instead carriers are requiring that the batteries be removed from smart bags before they’re checked and carried with the passenger in carryon luggage. Some carriers even require batteries to be removed from smart bags before the bags can be used as carryons. The thinking is that cabin crews can respond to a fire in the passenger compartmen­t much more quickly than if an incident starts out of sight in the cargo hold.

ALL THINGS CONSIDERED

Airlines have had the ban on checking smart bags in place for over a year, and most frequent fliers are aware of the prohibitio­n. But if you don’t own a smart bag and are shopping around for one, there are a couple of things to consider. First, there is a power

“Removable” does not always equate to “quickly and convenient­ly removable”

limit. The battery can be no more than 100 watt-hours (Wh) for lithium-ion and 2 grams of lithium metal for lithium metal, according to IATA. “These limits are no different to previous limits establishe­d for carrying batteries,” the IATA statement reads.

Next, assuming you want to be able to check the bag, you must be able to remove the battery. However “removable” does not always equate to “quickly and convenient­ly removable.” Some luggage manufactur­ers who tout their removable batteries tuck the battery compartmen­t away, making it difficult to retrieve from a packed bag. Others actually come with their own TSAapprove­d screwdrive­r to open the battery case.

The best bet is to choose a smart bag with a battery compartmen­t that’s both accessible and easy to open. Away is one manufactur­er that’s designed its carryon with a top-loading ejectable power supply. The bag’s polycarbon­ate shell is lightweigh­t and the TSA locks are built in. Away carryon bags start at $225 and come with a 10,000 mAh battery pack.

Arlo Skye is another line of smart luggage that boasts a “removable portable charger with built-in surge and short-circuit protection.” The 10,050 mAh battery pops out at the touch of a button, a design intended to make it easy for travelers to keep the power supply with them. The bags are stylish but pricey, starting at $450 for the polycarbon­ate body; it’s also available in an aluminumma­gnesium shell. No zippers here; the combinatio­n latches are TSAcomplia­nt.

Other smart bag manufactur­ers, such as Heys, avoid the lithium question altogether by loading their luggage with triple A batteries. The batteries are not rechargeab­le and there’s no auxiliary port to charge your other devices, but that’s offset by the fact that they don’t have to be removed from the case before checking. However they do have features like baggage tracking, remote control locks and even proximity alarms.

Finally, even though the rules have been around for a while, if you’re unsure whether you can check your bag, the smart thing to do is check with the airlines you're traveling with – all of them, if you’re transferri­ng carriers. Here you’ll find rules for both checked and carry-on luggage.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada