Batteries the Focus of AT&T Investigation 80
An anonymous reader writes "AT&T is focusing on the batteries supplied by Avestor as the cause of its 2006 equipment explosion in a suburban Houston neighborhood. The carrier says it has 17,000 of those same batteries still in its network. Some photos of the equipment that was shredded in the blast are also available."
The real reason for the explosion? (Score:5, Funny)
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BTW, you can chill out, because despite about 50 bagillion submissions (mine being one), the story about AT&T censoring pearl jam's anti-bush lyrics [theregister.co.uk] never made it onto slashdot (at least, I haven't been able to find it anywhere), despite it concerning net neutrality and webcasts, and despite it being on the front page of google news for 3 days straight. Things aren't quite as slan
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"Resistance is Fertile; You will be inseminated"
Sounds alot like (Score:3, Insightful)
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Cars blow up, too. And so do transformers filled with oil. And steam boilers at factories. Those are real disasters. I think this "reporting" is just a lame attempt at mudslinging AT&T.
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Re:Sounds alot like (Score:4, Insightful)
What's the most reactive chemical area around? The battery. It's a lithium type - and warns that it could catch fire/explode if damaged.
It's certainly not a 'cheap component' - it's stated to be more expensive than other battery types.
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They are just big vats of acid in thick glass jars with electrodes. All sorts of acid warrning sticks around the building too.
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You most certainly do, seeing as how you mostly managed to restate what I said.
Elecrticity does not explode
No it doesn't, but under the right circumstances it can heat something so fast and hard that it effectively explodes. Saw/heard it once when they tried replacing a fuse on a power line that had shorted closed next to our building(we were on generator at the time). It sounded enough like a gunshot to make me duck.
which can make semiconductors explode,
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Yes the primary fuses on the poles can be spectacular when they go. Again you've got a conductor (fusable link) inside the cartridge and when the power co cuts in the mains and there's still a short (which can be hard to tell in advance) the link basically vaporizes instantly and superheats the inside of the cartri
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I was just relaying the recommendations placed in the instruction manuals by the company that made the batteries. Oh, and it's not like laptop batteries have a perfect safety record [cpsc.gov] either.
They may be similar, but from my understanding, laptop LiIon batteries still use electrolyte, of with the presumably exploded ba
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Rising voltage does not blow fuses. Rising current does. Rising voltage actually makes fuses blow at higher current levels than they should, which is why you have to use special fuses in high voltage circuits.
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It's not ideal, but it's better than nothing. Of course a circuit breaker designed to trip on overvoltage is a good idea as well.
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My background is admittedly low power engineering, albeit in hazardous areas (int
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Historically, outside plant equipment cabinets have used lead-acid batteries. These have their own problems, but they are physically quite robust, and do not explode unless they are grossly abused. Yes, they do release H2 under some conditions, but this is a known factor in the cabinet design space.
O
Not a cheap component (Score:2)
The batteries implicated in the fires were advanced, very expensive lithium-metal-polymer [telephonyonline.com] types developed and built by Avestor. They were built for long-life outdoor installations: rated for -40C to 65C, temperature regulated, self monitoring: these were no low end batteries! AT&T retained an independent failure investigation quoted here [lightreading.com], which "...found that the battery design was sound, as were the safety features, and concluded that the risk of hazardous failures with this battery is as low, if not l
Energy Density (Score:2)
Back to NiCad (Score:1)
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Transformers do explode every so often (though not too often), but it's usually because of really bad weather or electrical power-line snafus. Phone transformers exploding because they contain batteries which are developing a history of being explosive--which likely wasn't known when the transformers were commissioned--is news.
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NiCds have a much lower energy density than LiPos -- which is exactly why people use LiPos rather than NiCds. The self discharge rate for NiCds is higher as well, and they need a little care taken when charging them to prevent voltage depression (well, many people call it memory, but that's another thing entirely.)
If LiPos are to be replaced, A123 batteries are a more likely replacement, though for things like this where weight and size shouldn'
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The replacement for LiPos will not be NiCd batteries.
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The problem with ni-cad batteries is real, see Federal Aviation Administration Advisory Circular 00-33A, "Nickel-Cadmium Battery Operational, Maintenance, and Overhaul Practices".
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In any event, the problem with LiPos is that the batteries themselves are flammable. With NiCds, they can turn into hot steamers, or can cause fires by getting so hot that they cause whatever is next to them to burn, or can fuel a fire by feeding a short circuit somewhere else, but they themselves don't burn. They can vent so violently that they sort of explode, but there's no fire involved. Note that the chemistry of NiMH cells is
Hold the phone....! (Score:2)
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U-verse, (Score:1)
I assume (Score:2)
It's not surprising that batteries can go ballistic. That happens now and then.
From what can be seen from the pictures the design wasn't sufficient to contain the batteries and any possible cause for explosion there. Maybe the designer didn't think about that or wanted to do a cheap job.
Awesome case mod ! (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=1
for a totally over-the-top case mod. It's Unreal meets Terminator.
All the pictures (Score:2)
The first pictures is 'before'
All the rest are 'after'
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I don't remember ever seeing a product "Made in America". Nearly everything comes from China these days, including the vast majority of the things sold under american brands.
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You know how much stuff I saw that said Made in China on it? Very little, at that it was usually cheap crap like stuffed toys. Most everything I saw in that country was made in Japan. [..] Oh how I wish the general populous of the US cared about either. Stuff usually cost at max 10% extra.
Is all that true? I have a Japanese friend, and she was apparently quite shocked (and annoyed) when she found out that her Nintendo DS was made in China.
Personally, I assumed she just hadn't been paying attention to how much stuff was made in China these days (we have a lot of it in the UK), but maybe what you say is right.
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Re:China: Possible Source of Problem (Score:5, Interesting)
Finally I called to cancel my service because I wasn't getting that for which I was paying. The operator convinced me to give them one more try
I never found any squirrel bones, but I hope the 90 VDC feed cooked the little bastard.
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That was an impostor. Probably a PI or the CIA installing a data trap on your line.
How do I know this?
Nobody from AT&T is that competent.
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Of course, it's not just AT&T. I also had Dish Network for a while, and I had to have them come out four times, different contractors each time, before I could get one that could figure out how to install the dish on my house. It was a tricky install
Hydrogen + Spark = Bad (Score:2, Informative)
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But I hear that the batteries in question are li-poly. I don't think they vent hydrogen; they just appear to have unfortunate internal similarities to C4 explosive when they're made wrong.
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What you do find, however, is cct breakers and contactors on the main power feed & internal distribution. But the usual explosive trigger is the sparks from the cells themselves as they self-destruct...
We used to get 1 or 2 incidents like this a year in Aus, mostly in the far north. The SLA batteries used here don't take kindly to temps above
The Secretary will Disavow any knowlege..... (Score:2)
Batteries. (Score:2)
Anyone else remember the issues with Toshiba/Sony/Apple laptop batteries?
'Close your eyes and you'll burst into flames'.
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Get used to it, it's going to get worse. (Score:2)
There are all sorts of economic forces in play pushing for higher energy density batteries.
I can't tell you what's next, battery technology wise, but it will have more explosive potential then Lithium batteries.
In 100 years kids will deliberately short small batteries to make them explode. Unless the world comes to it's senses and continues to allow access to guns and reloading supplies. In the areas that do lucky kids will continue to blow things up the old fashioned way...When I was a kid, we made ou
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There is no technical problem in doing so. It's strictly a matter of economics.
Just Perfect (Score:1)
gee. not only are they ugly but potentially deadly too.
these are significantly large, noisy cluster boxes that under existing statute att feels can be installed anywhere, at the end of driveways in front of private homes etc. we now have these all over town and are currently involved in negotiations w/att to minimise their aesthetic impact.
now i suppose we'll have to go back and negotiate their explosive impact too.
vrad box walk-through
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1o-1MkvzK4
check put the fa
Cougar? (Score:1)
Texas A&M (Score:1)
Not Texas A&M, U of Houston (Score:1)
(If he ever reads it.)
(erk.)
Flywheel Batteries (Score:2)
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They now coat internal surfaces with nylon, if the flywhee
Houston is hot as Hades (Score:1)