We need to educate about battery safety first. Anyone can buy
batteries, anyone can buy or make a tube mod and pop batteries in them. Problem is no one using a tube mod should "think" it is ok to go buy non rechargeable batteries and stack them in a tube mod not vented properly. But we do have people that do that because they are not told not to do that. As an industry, even tho it is mostly cottage, we have a responsibility to educate our friends and family who might go out and buy the wrong batt just because it is cheaper and end up frying their APV or themselves. We have to at least educate against that. All batts can fail, BUT some batts are a 100% (non rechargeable unprotected) fail in the wrong set up. It will go boom! We do not want that to ever happen again.
To me it is like warning people to never talk on a cell phone while plugged into a wall charger because it can explode and kill you. It did happen and people still use cell phones, but best to do it safely. We just want safety warnings. bnrk
I did that. Didn't know about it until I took my phone to Verizon because it wasn't holding a charge. This was probably my first Lithium device other than button cells.
"Do you use your phone while it on the charger?" She showed me how puffy the battery was. That thing came with 4 books of a combined several hundred pages and believe it or not I read most of them. I always look for the
"There is no evidence that these cause brain tumors but always keep it at least 1/2 inch away from your body" statement.
Lithium batteries are still relatively new to the consumer marketplace. Other than ecigs, RC cars, flashlights, and I guess RC aircraft, most applications come with safe handling instructions and warnings in addition to proprietary batteries and safety features built into the devices.
GM just had a major explosion with injuries while "extreme" testing lithium batteries.
Robot Vacuums are marketed to use while you are away from home and re-dock themselves to charge. They have started house fires.
Power tools have been moving to lithium. Consumers charge their tools at night and their shops have caught fire.
I don't know what's in my toothbrush....
Major manufacturers take precautions, provide warnings, and investigate and settle when something does go wrong.
Modern technology moves so fast that few consumers don't understand how things work anymore.
The problem is, they don't expect to have to, and sellers don't want them to know they should!