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An iPhone that was expelled from the cabin of Alaska Airlines flight 1282 on Friday survived a fall of more than 16,000 feet and was discovered intact.

recovered-alaska-phone.jpg

Vancouver, Washington resident Sean Bates shared images of the device on Sunday after he found it on the side of Barnes Road in Portland, Oregon. The iPhone was in full working condition and was in fact still open to an Alaska Airlines email. There were no cracks on the display, though it was protected by a case and presumably landed in a forested area with soft ground cover.

Bates alerted the National Transportation Safety Board, and officials came out to collect the device. The NTSB told Bates that it was the second phone to be found from the flight in the area.


The iPhone was expelled from Alaska Airlines flight 1282 after a portion of the plane blew out shortly after it took off from the Portland International Airport. The aircraft was able to safely land back at the Portland airport, and all passengers and crew members survived.

The sudden depressurization in the cabin of the plane caused items like smartphones to be sucked out, where they fell to the ground below. In 2011, Wired wrote a piece on the terminal velocity of an iPhone falling from a plane, which is a good explainer on how the device was able to survive. In a nutshell, the low weight and maximum speed of the iPhone leads to a limited amount of force on landing despite the height of the fall, so the end result isn't too much different from dropping it from a lower height.

There were two smartphones found from the plane, along with other debris such as the plug door that may give some insight into what went wrong.

Article Link: iPhone Survives 16,000-Foot Drop After Alaska Airlines Plane Incident
 
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As I posted in the iPhone forum, I'm skeptical but what a marketing opportunity for both Apple and the case manufacturer!

Edit: what is also amazing is that nobody was seated next to that door/plug. I would assume that was an exit row-ish type of seat and those are usually taken. In the past I have been lax with the seat belt.... no longer!
 
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Ok, gonna try this out now …
Kidding aside, bad thing that happened and glad no one got hit by the phone, not by that door…
 
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Reminds me of the Marantz stereo ads in the 70s showing a receiver or amp that had been in a fire and was still capable of working ... or Timex watches that keep on ticking.
 
I know people with no passcode on their phone. Crazy considering how much personal data is on there these days…but some people are a little nuts. Usually their reasoning is along the lines of “I don’t trust Face ID and a passcode is inconvenient”
I didn't have a passcode on mine for a while - I live alone and seldom leave the house - but I would definitely enable it prior to plane travel!
 
It didn’t drop on the concrete. Most likely it hit the trees. I assume she turned off the auto lock which is why the phone is still unlock. But how does it still have charge when it’s been a few days.
 
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