Galaxy S III Spontaneous Combustion Tale Was a Hoax

Everyone loves a good spontaneous combustion story, which is probably why the media jumped all over a forum posting last month by an Irish Samsung Galaxy S III user who claimed their phone had burst into flames in their car.

“So I [sic] driving along today with my Galaxy S3 in my car mount when suddenly a white flame, sparks and a bang came out of the phone,” Boards.ie forum user “dillo2k10” wrote on June 20. “I pulled in to look at my phone, [it] burned from the inside out. Burned through the plastic and melted [the] case to my phone.”

While the story was a good one, the fact is, it was just a story. Following the publishing of a report Friday by Fire Investigations, a firm hired by Samsung to investigate the incident, the user came clean.

“I would like to retract my original statement,” dillo2k10 wrote. “The damage to the phone was caused by another person, although they were attempting to recover the phone from water this later caused the damage shown on the phone. It occurred due to a large amount of external energy and there was no fault with the phone. This was not a deliberate act but a stupid mistake.”

The “large amount of external energy” is believed to have come from a microwave.

In his report for Fire Investigations, investigator Peter Mansi noted that the physical damage to the phone’s internal components did not appear to have been created from energy within the handset but rather from an external source.

He added that the phone’s antenna is a passive component unconnected to a power source. “It is, however,” he added, “a suitable conductor for microwave energy and our tests clearly demonstrated this.”

He also suggested that Samsung question the phone’s owner as to why the moisture detection patch had been removed from the device.

Following the youth’s report of the flaming Galaxy S III, a Samsung customer service rep visited the user and replaced the damaged unit and promised him some free stuff. It’s unknown whether Samsung will repossess the replacement phone.

Via: PCW

Prateek Panda

Prateek is the Founder of TheTechPanda. He's passionate about technology startups and entrepreneurship and enjoys speaking to new founders every day. Prateek has also been consistently regarded as one of the top marketing experts in the region.

Recent Posts

Is AI Hitting a Plateau? The Scaling Debate OpenAI Prefers to Avoid

I think OpenAI is not being honest about the diminishing returns of scaling AI with…

17 hours ago

PayalGaming becomes India’s first female gamer to win an international award

S8UL Esports, the Indian esports and gaming content organisation, won the ‘Mobile Organisation of the…

1 day ago

Funding alert: Tech startups that raked in moolah this month

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent funding events in the tech ecosystem, seeking…

2 days ago

Colgate launches AI-powered personalized dental screenings

Colgate-Palmolive (India) Limited, the oral care brand, launched its Oral Health Movement. The AI-enabled initiative…

2 days ago

The role of ASR in voice bots: Revolutionizing customer interaction through real-time recognition

This fast-paced business world belongs to the forward thinking organisations that prioritise innovation and fully…

3 days ago

Disrupting Fintech: How product studios are transforming financial services

In the rapidly evolving financial technology landscape, innovative product studios are emerging as powerful catalysts…

1 week ago