Unattended E-Cigarette Explodes, Car Burns - Vape Squad
I searched "exploding ecig battery" and there are many incidents of it. I advice against leaving battery charging unattended any where.
Not in the car, nor in the house.. If you are not there , don't leave it on a charger.
Yeah but do a search for "exploding cell phone" while you're at it.
Seriously. The batteries used in e-cigs are lithium ion. The exact same kind of battery used in cell phones, tablets like the iPad and the Kindle and the rest, the iPod and other music players, laptop computers... oh, electric cars and hybrids too. It is possible for any and all of those devices to overheat and catch fire. And no more likely nor less likely than the e-cig.
Ah, here's an interesting bit:
Chuck Schumer: Watch out for exploding cell phone batteries. - NY Daily News.
"Since 2011, the Consumer Product Safety Commission has documented over 60 incidents of phone batteries smoking, catching fire, expanding or exploding, including one occurrence of a battery exploding in a Texas man's ear, Schumer noted."
But that's 60 incidents over two years with over 300 million phones in use (see:
List of countries by number of mobile phones in use - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia). That is to say, the odds are so tiny, you have a better chance of being hit by a meteor.
Yes, lithium is a volatile metal. If it were inert, it wouldn't make good batteries. You should exercise care with lithium ion batteries but the tech is pretty solid now days and unless you're buying the uber cheap knock offs, you have much better odds winning the lottery than you have of ever seeing a battery go up.
And
anything that is true for the care of e-cig batteries is
also true for every other lithium ion battery you have. If you don't believe me, take a look at the battery in your cell right now. I can tell you without seeing it that it's a 3.7v lithium ion. Same as my Twists. The only difference being form factor and mAh capacity.
Further, the charge is controlled by chips that are mass produced now. These batteries are common on the order of millions upon millions (just the count of active cell phones in the US is greater than the US population), the charging chips are pretty much the same in most devices. They're "off the shelf" parts.
So if you can't charge your e-cig overnight, you cannot charge your cell phone, iPad, iPod, laptop, you name it,
either.
Now, wanna see a laptop burst into flames? It's the first part of this clip:
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j4DlUUZxFvs[/URL].
(And, remember, they're called "lap tops" because people set them in their laps. Right on top of their, ahem, delicate organs.)