Explosion Experiments with Smart Phone Batteries, Empty=Safe Full=Danger Video

motormafia

Alfrescian
Loyal
Joined
Aug 7, 2008
Messages
1,204
Points
48


Identical batteries same model purchased together. From 2017 Red Mi model phone.

1st battery =100% full charged. Exploded instantly when nailed on.

2nd battery =0% charge, was charged 1st to full and used until flat. Nothing will happen nailed nor when Axed cut through center.

No charge = No energy = safe

100% charge = max risk

Over charged = you asked for it!
 
I knew this result for sure. But needed a video to prove it for satisfaction.

I was not satisfied when some airport safety procedure Blindly go by the capacity of lithium batteries WITHOUT CONSIDERING weather they are flat nor full to regulate weather they will allow you to bring on board flights.

Some how they told me a limit of 10000mAH max, something like that. They had no idea that the actual safety actually depending on the energy level remaining inside. If my 20000mAH power bank is empty, vs 8000mAH power bank that is 100% charged, my is absolutely safe. There is battery level indicator in the devices. Empty charge ones are safe because there is no energy to cause heat / smoke / flame / explosion. Energy level is the whole magic.
 
Flase flag.

Angmoh wanna blame Chinese products. Tell angmoh make their own batteries which will be:

1. 10 times expensive.

2. Explode faster becos angmoh cant fuck in manufacturing.

Even opium contained arbiturate poisonous industrial revolution substances not pure opium.




Identical batteries same model purchased together. From 2017 Red Mi model phone.

1st battery =100% full charged. Exploded instantly when nailed on.

2nd battery =0% charge, was charged 1st to full and used until flat. Nothing will happen nailed nor when Axed cut through center.

No charge = No energy = safe

100% charge = max risk

Over charged = you asked for it!
 
Who in the right mind would hammer a phone or battery trying to make it explode (or like what my PAP government put it "pop")?
 
Fucking morons...

the burning batteries just prove that Group1 metals, e.g. Lithium, is highly reactive.

If there isn't violent reaction with the lithium when exposed to moisture, I worry.
 
Who in the right mind would hammer a phone or battery trying to make it explode (or like what my PAP government put it "pop")?


This is the method that will surely work to prove the objective of the test. To show that flat batteries are safe. Only those with energy inside will have heat / flame / smoke / explosion. Risk is actually proportional to the REMAINING Energy Level.
 
Fucking morons...

the burning batteries just prove that Group1 metals, e.g. Lithium, is highly reactive.

If there isn't violent reaction with the lithium when exposed to moisture, I worry.


Don't care what group. We use power banks and phones and cameras etc. These days all Lithium Ion.
 
Back
Top