Nope that’s all I was saying, or most of it anyway. I was also pointing out that the “more powerful problem” has some repercussions that increase danger geometrically not linearly. When a containment case fails it explodes. Shrapnel and flaming lithium liquid. It’s an incindiary hand grenade. In the two known cases where this has killed people apparently the shrapnel was the actual killer. Pieces of flying case cutting arteries.
Allow me to preface my quick response with a few facts please.
According to Mooch, the chance of getting a dangerously faulty battery from one of the name brand manufacturers is astronomically low. He said that in one of his videos. Like one in millions. His words. They have alot to lose by allowing bad batteries to escape into the market.
Taking lithium ion wholesale as an example, my favorite vendor, they have sold millions of batteries and have never sold a fake or dangerously defective one even once. Jon, the owner, personally gave a long detailed answer to a question of mine in this regard at another site. Zero fakes sold because of the meticulous attention to sound practices and suppliers. Well over 500 Google ratings and 94% 5 stars. (no, I have no affiliation with that company)
So what we have so far, which wasn't always the case, is the ability to get known good and genuine batteries, for all practical purposes, every single time. That makes the issue of the batteries themselves safer today than it was in the past.
As is the case with any and every man made device, 100% reliability is not, and never will be possible. That said, in virtually every case we know of, with the information available, some version of user error was the cause of a catastrophic failure.
Maybe somebody can point one out, but I have seen zero cases where a well maintained, properly set up device using easily obtainable known good batteries, in the hands of a knowledgeable user just inexplicably blew up.
Now, with all of that in mind, the percentage of dangerous events among all mech users as a whole, is infinitesimally small. A handful among multitudes, several dozen of which I am personally acquainted with.
In addition to all of this, there are a fair number of catastrophic failures among regulated users around as well. Yes there are and very far from just Smok products too. If you demand it, I will do my best to find the time to provide unassailable evidence in that regard, which I promise you, I have seen with my own two eyes.
However, even in the case of problems with regulated devices, the vast majority of the time it is user error of some variety and sometimes the users themselves will say so in the wake of a lesson learned the hard way.
With all THAT now said, far more people are hurt in automobiles and bathtubs than are by all vaping equipment, regulated or not, and I bet the percentages are less for vaping. Meaning that raw numbers aren't very big when considered in the light of the number of total users.