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Some iPhones Overheating -- Two-Year-Old Problem

By Erik Sherman | Jun 1, 2009

Apple recently announced that iPhone and iPod users could experience a small electrical shock when using ear buds. An annoyance, perhaps, but not as big as serious iPhone overheating. Over the last two years, there have been reported incidents of iPhones overheating. Apparently the problem is still around, as I just heard from a major tech executive that his wife’s iPhone has been overheating, causing all the apps to close and the device to lock up.

So far as I can tell, occasional serious heat problems first started popping up in 2007, when a variety of people reported their iPhones were overheating, in some cases enough that a unit would become too hot to hold. That’s from regular use, not cracking the case for a round of hardware hacking. Some users who upgraded firmware this year have found that the devices had problems connecting to Wi-Fi networks, with one solution apparently to put the iPhone into a freezer to cool down.

Complaints about iPhones overheating are still showing up on Apple’s own discussion boards, along with complaints about MacBook Pros overheating. One of the explanations for the problem is that supposedly installing certain apps can cause the issue.

In the past, Apple has been known to Apple had a battery exchange for certain laptops because certain Sony lithium-ion batteries were overheating in specific but “rare” circumstances. Of course, when you are selling millions of a device, statistically rare situations may commonly appear. And in 2007, Apple, with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission issued a voluntary recall on an older PowerBook AC adapter. (A search on the CPSC site shows no actions for the iPhone.)

Part of the issue may be that the “exterior of iPhone functions as a cooling surface that transfers heat from inside the unit to the cooler air outside,” and so Apple notes that the handset can get warm when being used or charging. (This suggestion, which appears in multiple places on Apple’s support site, seems to be the only one that addresses an iPhone getting warm, though perhaps there’s something obvious that I’m missing.) But you’d think that most people buying an iPhone had used a handset in the past and would be familiar with how devices can get toasty under similar circumstances. The descriptions of the problems sound as though they get considerably hotter than this.

Apple is hardly the only company that has faced device overheating issues. RIM recently had an issue with the Blackberry Bold that caused NTT DoCoMo to stop selling that smartphone in Japan. But even if a relatively isolated occurrence on the iPhone, it could potentially spur yet another class action suit targeting the product, which must get to be some degree of distraction for management.

Burning house image via Flickr user 111 Emergency, CC 2.0.

Erik Sherman is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in Newsweek, the New York Times Magazine, Technology Review, the Financial Times, Chief Executive, and other publications. Follow him on Twitter.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Apple Device Heat Problem Heating Up

    BNET Technology - 96 days 16 hours 25 minutes ago

    August 19, 2009 -- As I've mentioned before, there's a long standing problem with iPhones and iPod seriously overheating. And according to various reports, Apple has

  • Apple Allegedly Covers Up Battery Problems

    BNET Technology - 124 days 2 hours 43 minutes ago

    I’ve reported before about a long-term problem that Apple iPhones have seemed to have with iPhones overheating, though the company hasn’t publicly acknowledge the extent of the issue. According to some, the major cause is likely a battery issue. Well, a Seattle reporter is claiming that Apple has been preventing her and others from getting...

  • Users find Apple’s iPhone and iPod shocking, literally

    Boy Genius Report - 187 days 14 hours 6 minutes ago

    No, seriously. Apple just put up a new support page in response to claims from many users regarding electrical shocks received from Apple’s iPhone and iPod earbuds. The shocks are described as “small and quick”, but clearly the issue is serious enough to warrant an official response from Apple. The aforementioned support page, found below...

  • Apple warns of potentially shocking iPhone and iPod experience

    Computer Weekly - 187 days 20 hours 10 minutes ago

    Apple has warned that iPod and iPhone users could get a shock from static electricity in the company's branded earphones. "When using headphones in areas where the air is very dry, it is easy to build up static electricity and possible for your ear to receive a small electrostatic discharge from the headphones," Apple said in a support site...

  • Shock warning for iPhone, iPod users

    Silicon.com - 187 days 20 hours 7 minutes ago

    iPhone and iPod users may experience a "small and quick" shock via their earbuds due to a build-up of static electricity, Apple has warned. People listening to one of the devices in extremely dry air are most at risk of receiving a static electricity shock through the earbuds, according to a warning posted on Apple's website. The post likened...

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  •  
    1

    william4ita

    06/02/09 | Report as spam

    Tabloid Reporting

    A picture of house burning down? IS BNET the web's tech National Enquirer or what? It's bad enough that a conversation with a tech exec's wife is in the lead paragraph to demonstrate the seriousness of the problem! Look out tabloids!

  •  
    2

    ErikSherman

    06/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some iPhones Overheating -- Two-Year-Old Problem

    Images are often treated as ironic comments, as you can see from many of the posts on this site. And, if you reread the post, there was no conversation with the tech executive's wife, but with the tech executive - and ample evidence that there has been an ongoing problem. So why not stay focused on that fact, rather than trying to find an excuse to ignore it?

  •  
    3

    william4ita

    06/03/09 | Report as spam

    Real Muckrakers?

    I think it's more relevant for BNET to stay focused on the fact that that this two-year-old problem is back in the news because you had a conversation with a tech exec who had a conversation with his wife about how warm her iPhone is. Mix in an ironic photo, and maybe some reader will click on the ad next to it , and BNET can report some impressive ad click-thru figure to justify a profitable ad rate. Then all of you have an excuse to ignore your lack of real muckraking.

  •  
    4

    ErikSherman

    06/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some iPhones Overheating -- Two-Year-Old Problem

    Nonsense - it woudln't have mattered who mentioned the overheating problem (which goes well beyone getting warm). It's still been a problem that Apple hasn't addressed. I reported it because it is an ongoing story. I don't see how the photo would drive traffic, and, frankly, I don't particularly care about how many page views any given story gets. If you think this kind of story is make or break in terms of traffic or how well BNET does, you're completely mistaken. You're also mistaken if you think that I would choose a topic based on some wild-eyed hope of getting a gazillion hits (or if you think that it would make a noticeable difference to me financially).

    It's also not "muckraking," which would indicate a bit more investigation into a previously unreported issue. And the story isn't "back" in the news, but still there because no one at Apple seems to be addressing it.

    I also find it interesting that the only two posts I see you've responded to on BNET both happen to be about Apple and both happen to be critical of the company.

  •  
    5

    william4ita

    06/03/09 | Report as spam

    Overheatng - iPhone or the defensive reporter?

    I must have touched a nerve, you're hotter than the iPhone. Sorry, but you really offered nothing of substance that was new to make the story more than re-heated filler. My bias has nothing to do with Apple, and everything to do with journalistic integrity. The epidemic of sensationalist reporting that infects almost everything we read these days is distressing. Your article is not the worst, but it is a case in point. I believe BNET can do better. And, I'm sure your team will try to do better. Good luck!

  •  
    6

    ErikSherman

    06/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some iPhones Overheating -- Two-Year-Old Problem

    Oh, hardly hot - just wondering why you only show up on Apple issues.

    And I guess if your definition of journalistic integrity is to ignore problems that don't get resolved, then this story would not be for you. It's a business issue, for sure, and this is a site devoted to the business of various industries.

  •  
    7

    atish_t

    06/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some iPhones Overheating -- Two-Year-Old Problem

    my macbookpro gets really hot.
    sometimes i cant touch it. its actually 72
    degrees C as we speak!! its just sitting on
    the table, i wouldnt dare lift it up. got it
    from a friend (no receipt). its just over a
    year old. what can i do?

  •  
    8

    ErikSherman

    06/10/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Some iPhones Overheating -- Two-Year-Old Problem

    Sorry, atish_t, but I haven't the slightest idea. You might try a web search to see who has had similar problems and what solutions they might have found.

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