Teenager burned by flaming mobile phone battery

Kyocera Wireless under the spotlight again…

NEWS A Kyocera Wireless 2325 mobile phone caused "fist-size flames" that injured a California teenager earlier this week, according to a fire investigator.

Frank Huddleston, an investigator at the Ontario, California fire department, suspects the phone's battery, its original, is to blame for the accident, which occurred last week but he stressed that the exact cause is still to be determined.

The US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSU) made aware of the event, has yet to decide what to do, a spokesman for the group said.

Verizon Wireless, which sold the phone, is seeking out the California girl's family to learn more, according to company spokeswoman Brenda Boyd Raney. "Reports of this nature get the highest levels of attention and follow-up," she said.

Phone maker Kyocera Wireless did not return calls seeking comment.

The incident is not the first time that a mobile phone has either overheated or exploded in the United States - and it's not the first reported instance of a Kycera phone malfunctioning. All of the incidents have raised concerns over the safety of a device jammed into pockets, handbags or pressed against a person's face.

Late last month, Verizon Wireless recalled 50,000 cell phone batteries, some of which may be counterfeit, after reports suggested that they may cause minor fires and injuries. The TM-510 batteries, which carry the LG Mobile Phones brand, don't have the circuitry normally installed to prevent overcharging, according to CPSC.

In October 2003, Kyocera temporarily halted shipments of its KE413 Phantom phone after one sold by Cricket Wireless vented hot gasses, scaring but not injuring a consumer in Omaha, Nebraska. Kyocera determined it was an isolated problem and began selling the phone a week later.

In January, the CPSC issued its first-ever recall of cell phone batteries, some 40,000 from Coslight International Group in Hong Kong. The batteries were on four phones, all Kyocera Wireless models that overheated. One person was slightly injured from the defect. The batteries were also available from Verizon Wireless and Alltel.

Witnesses to the latest mishap said the 16-year-old girl had the phone in her back pocket, when her phone let out a whoosh, bulged, then shot out flames and smoke. She was treated for second-degree burns at an area hospital and was released shortly afterwards.

Huddleston said there wasn't a stove or other source of flame nearby at the time, and pre-July Fourth firework pranks have been ruled out. Witnesses saw flames coming from the bottom of the phone, where vents are installed to prevent overheating batteries from exploding. The battery, once wafer-size, was "the shape of a sausage with one end open," Huddleston said.

Ben Charny writes for CNET News.com

Comments

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  1. 1. Candice Billings

    I recently replaced the RECALL battery in my (Kyocera Slider) cell phone the day after Thanksgiving. Since then my phone had starting melting in different places. (People thought a dog chewed it), I took the battery off the back of the phone and you could see places on the back of the battery where it had started melting and even on the inside where the battery closes. I took the phone back to Verizon which they replaced and the new phone I now have is getting WARM after talking just a few minutes. I explained to Verizon and even contacted Kyocera and explained to them. They seemed not to be too concerned about it. I feel like there is still a problem with the phones but I guess some other people will have to get hurt or killed before someone will check it out.

    • 15 December 2004 22:42
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