iPhone Sends Plane Far
Off Course: Flight Attendants Are Right!
An Apple iPhone may have been
responsible for interfering with a regional airliner's navigation equipment
while a flight was in ascent in 2011, sending the craft miles off-course.
Fortunately for the flight, which landed safely, an attendant managed to
convince the man who turned his phone on to turn it back off.
An unidentified co-pilot told
NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System that when the phone was turned off, the
interference went away.
The incident was one of 27 taking
place over a two-year period between 2010 and 2012, according to a report by
Bloomberg published on Wednesday. While the number of incidents are small, given
the amount of flights taking place each day, they may explain why airlines are
so hesitant to let passengers, like Alec Baldwin and his infamous kindle, to
turn on electronic devices below 10,000 feet.
Electronic devices, particularly
cell phones, can interfere with an aircraft's sensitive navigation equipment and
overwhelm radio and GPS signals. To prevent any incidents from taking place, the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) requires all electronics to be turned off
during a flight's most vulnerable stages.
But the FAA has recently been
considering relaxing the rules surrounding electronics on flights, including
everything from iPhones and MP3 players to iPads and Amazon Kindles. That has
some airlines, but not all, concerned after logging interference issues over the
decades.
Freeing up the skies for personal
electronics use is a popular idea for many customers, including politicians.
U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) has been outspoken about loosening the
rules around non-cellular electronics in flight, saying, through a spokesperson,
that requiring devices to be placed on airplane mode ought to be sufficient
enough for airlines. While most devices today include airplane modes - modes
which turn off all radio transmissions in a device - the term can carry
different connotations among different devices.
Some may cry out "hypocrisy!"
before pointing towards the use of iPads by airline pilots on Delta. But the
iPads used by these pilots don't connect to cellular networks, as some models
do. Airlines opposed to letting customers use iPads during flight say customer
devices haven't been tested and may malfunction, causing flight
interference.
In January of this year, the FAA
appointed an advisory committee to, with representatives from both the airline
and technology industries, to recommend whether or not the FAA should broaden
the use of electronic devices in planes. The recommendations are expected in to
be published in July.
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