Airline Industry Remains
Divided Over Personal Electronics Usage During Takeoff and Landing
Earlier this year, we noted that the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) was continuing to look at the use of personal electronic devices during the taxi, takeoff, and landing phases of commercial flights, hoping to take action by the end of the year to loosen restrictions currently requiring that all devices be powered down during these times.
Bloomberg now provides another
update on the situation, noting that the airline industry remains divided over
whether restrictions should be relaxed as reports of possible interference
between these devices and aircraft electronics continue to surface. The report
leads with a brief anecdote involving an iPhone:
The regional airliner was climbing past 9,000 feet when its compasses went haywire, leading pilots several miles off course until a flight attendant persuaded a passenger in row 9 to switch off an Apple Inc. iPhone.
The regional airliner was climbing past 9,000 feet when its compasses went haywire, leading pilots several miles off course until a flight attendant persuaded a passenger in row 9 to switch off an Apple Inc. iPhone.
"The timing of the cellphone
being turned off coincided with the moment where our heading problem was
solved," the unidentified co-pilot told NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System
about the 2011 incident.
The plane landed safely.
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