Turn Off That Phone!
For those who've use portable electronic devices aboard airliners: Here's why they're dangerous.
- By John Croft
- Air & Space magazine, September 2004
The truth is that portable electronic devices can emit powerful electromagnetic radiation that can muck up an aircraft’s navigation and communication systems and actually endanger a flight. Chad Slattery
SOON AFTER FRONTIER AIRLINES FLIGHT 469 departed Baltimore for Denver on the night of December 2, 2003, passengers in the Airbus A319 twin-jet doled out $5 each to rent headsets for the carrier’s television service. The woman in seat 14E, however, had a cheaper alternative: She powered up a hand-held TV set.
Bad move. A flight attendant swooped in and told her to turn it off. Portable TVs are taboo on Frontier airplanes, one of the details illustrated in the laminated safety brochure that no one seems to read. After the attendant moved away, 14E turned her TV back on, only this time she hid the portable’s blue glow under an airline pillow.
Turning on a portable TV inflight seems innocent enough. The airlines offer their own television and phone service, so why should using a portable version of either be a problem? The truth is that portable electronic devices, such as mobile phones, compact disc players, and remote-controlled toys, can emit powerful electromagnetic radiation that can muck up an aircraft’s navigation and communication systems and actually endanger a flight. Airline telephones, on the other hand, transmit radio signals to and from antennas mounted externally on the aircraft, and such phones meet Federal Aviation Administration specifications that prevent them from interfering with the aircraft’s radio and navigation systems. Portable electronic devices do not currently meet such FAA requirements.
Although 14E’s disobedience, duly noted by a passenger across the aisle—me—did not appear to affect how the aircraft handled, such apparently innocent diversions have caused problems on other flights. The captain of a Boeing 737 airliner on an instrument approach to Baltimore-Washington International Airport one night in March 2003 reported that his course indicator, called a localizer, had been centered during the approach, then suddenly showed a full deflection. Just then the aircraft, flying on autopilot, broke out of the clouds—at an altitude of 2,500 feet and a full mile off course. The incident is described in NASA’s Aviation Safety Reporting System (asrs.arc.nasa.gov), a service that allows people to anonymously report aviation problems.
The 737 pilot theorized that after announcing that the United States had started attacking Iraq (information he had received from air traffic control), one or more passengers had placed calls on their mobile phones. His suggestion for prevention: Never make an announcement to passengers that might encourage mobile phone use during a flight.
Bruce Donham, who has spent a decade studying such interference for Boeing, recalls several incidents when the manufacturer was informed of anomalies—like an autopilot turning itself off during cruise or an airplane banking on its own—and advised the airlines to purchase the suspect portable electronic devices for tests. To the frustration of Boeing engineers, follow-up testing never duplicated the problems, either on subsequent flights or in the lab. “We think it’s a very low risk,” Donham says of the threat from electronic devices, “but we have to gather data to prove it out.”
The government first began investigating disruptions from carry-on devices in the early 1960s, when an FM radio was blamed for an incorrect off-course indication. The U.S. Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics (RTCA), an FAA advisory group, called together government, industry, and academic experts to investigate the problem. Decades later, RTCA continues to study the threat: Its 1996 findings and associated advisory circulars published by the FAA form the basis for airlines’ ground rules on portable electronic devices in the air.
The advice calls for some electronic devices to be turned off whenever an aircraft is below 10,000 feet to “lessen the possibility of interference” during takeoff and landing, and encourages carriers to explain to the public the reasons for the prohibition. For mobile phones, the FAA defers to Federal Communications Commission rules, which prohibit their use when airborne. Though interference with aircraft is a potential problem, especially with mobile phones that boost their power output when searching for service, the FCC’s concern is that a mobile phone roaming at 35,000 feet will contact multiple towers at the same time, causing disruptions for ground-based users. Aside from mobile phones, the FAA leaves the ultimate decision on what can and can’t be used to the carrier and the pilot.
Related topics: Air Travel Aerospace Science Aerospace Technology FAA 20th Century Aviation 21st Century Aviation
| Tweet | Digg |






Comments (1)
This is common misconception, and crap that the airlines pull to try to scare flyers. I've been working with, on, and around planes for over 40 years, and am a pilot myself. The only thing that having a device like a cell phone one does is maybe cause a little static in the headphones, assuming the cockpit is not properly/adaquately shielded (which most commercial jets now are).
They tell you to turn off things like this because they want to make sure you are not distracted during the safety briefing, or in the event of an emergency. Forgetting to turn off your cell phone, iPod, or even laptop, will NOT ever take a plane out of the air.
Posted by BAE on April 5,2010 | 02:56 PM