This week’s edition of Batteries Are Dangerous brings us to the great state of New Jersey, where a Bluetooth speaker recently started burning on a girl’s bed and then exploded. Thankfully, nobody was hurt, and the house didn’t burn down. The incident still serves as a cautionary tale for us all.
By now, this sort of story sounds frightfully familiar. NBC New York reports:
The woman said her daughter had been in her room listening to music with the speaker on her bed, not plugged in, and casually came into her mother’s room to say it was smoking. …
She said they didn’t know what to do; her daughter grabbed an oven mitt and paper bag. They threw the device in the bag and brought it out to the apartment stairwell, where the mother said the device “popped” and burst into flames.
Quick thing here: Putting anything that’s smoking into a paper bag is not a great idea. Paper is very flammable. Then again, nobody should have to worry about their gadgets exploding. The risk of devices with lithium-ion batteries isn’t going away any time soon, though.
It’s unclear what model of speaker was involved in the New Jersey incident. The mother, Nicole Tatem, tweeted at JBL as well as Best Buy and Target, asking the stores to pull JBL products from their shelves. Upon close inspection, the form factor of the damaged speaker suggests that it might be the JBL Pulse, which features LED lights that respond to your music.
Upon even closer inspection, you can clearly see “NFC” written in large white letters on the bottom of the device. If the speaker is indeed a JBL Pulse, this is where the NFC plate would be. However, some images of authentic Pulses show the NFC logo to be small and black on the device. This raises the possibility that the New Jersey family may have owned a counterfeit JBL Pulse. A quick Google search shows that counterfeit JBL speakers are pretty common.
We’ve reached out to JBL to learn more details about the incident. The company says that it’s “looking into the matter” and will soon provide more details about what happened in New Jersey. Meanwhile, the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) told Gizmodo that there have been any other reports of exploding Bluetooth speakers, although the agency wasn’t able to confirm which brands were involved.
We’ll update this post as soon as we learn more details. In the meantime, be careful with batteries. They’re dangerous.
[NBC New York]