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#1 |
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Triple-A Player
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 109
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iPod's trip to the airport
Have never taken my iPod to the airport before. Anyone know if X-ray machines, or whatever security scanning equipment they have, will screw up an iPod?
Just wondering Thanks |
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#2 |
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Prospect
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: London, ON
Posts: 17
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i've taken mine through... just tossed it in a bin, with my keys and stuff.. and no problems...
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12" PowerBook G4 1Ghz 20 GB iPod |
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#3 |
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Triple-A Player
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Houston - Though I'd rather be in Boston!
Posts: 192
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no more than it will screw up a powerbook.... which is not at all.
no worries - its safe. -j |
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#4 |
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MVP
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Korat, Thailand
Posts: 2,046
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I've been asked to turn mine on. I guess that's to prove I haven't replaced the innards with some sort of dangerous device.
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http://www.mgnewman.com/ |
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#5 |
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Prospect
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Maine
Posts: 24
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Mine was fine too... I also had to turn mine on and they had to do a big inspection on it... but the x-ray wont harm it at all.
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#6 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2002
Posts: 10,677
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X-Rays, no problem. Magnets, BIG problem.
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#7 |
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League Commissioner
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Tokyo
Posts: 6,046
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Magnetic intensity is an inverse square function (meaning the intensity drops with the square of the distance - double the distance, one-fourth the intensity)
To increase the aureal density of a magnetic storage medium you must reduce the coercivity of the medium (make it less sensitive) to make each individual magnetic domain smaller. This in turn requires a more intensive field to change the magnetic domain, which means a magnet can be closer before it damages anything. Short form: bigger, physically smaller drives are harder to damage with a magnet than smaller ones. An old 400K floppy (or worse, a 160K 5.25 inch one from the Stone Age) is in trouble, but unless the iPod is stuck against the side of the machine and vibrating you don't need to be concerned. The metal case will also help. If you really want to test the process, take your iPod to the airport on a slow day along with some donuts. Ask them to run it through a dozen or so times (one for each donut, maybe?) at maximum power. Take it home and run a disk check. Any security employees out there want to try this for us? |
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#8 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Triple-A Player
Join Date: Nov 2002
Posts: 52
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Is there any such thing as a "slow day" at the airport? ![]() BTW, I had my iPod in my carryon luggage and it went through just fine. The interesting thing that happened to me was on the plane: The attendant on one of the flights asked me if it was a phone.
Last edited by pairaka; 08-18-2004 at 03:53 AM. |
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#9 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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League Commissioner
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Tokyo
Posts: 6,046
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Depends on the airport. I was in Abbotsford, BC on Sept 13, 2001. Extra security there was a matter of pulling a table out of storage and adding one extra guard. Screening all 250 passengers they saw that day didn't tax anyone's patience much. Don't try it at JFK
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#10 |
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Triple-A Player
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Waterloo, IA
Posts: 200
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Just don't run it thru the machine while it's ON. Last time I flew, I decided to leave my powerbook asleep so I could just wake it up (instead of booting it up) if they asked me to turn it on. MISTAKE. Thru the x-ray it went, while sleeping. On the plane, I pull it out to watch a movie. It doesn't look asleep, it looks off. Won't turn on. Battery was fine, but tried spare, no help. Resetting the PMU had no effect. I was unable to get it working during the flight. When I got to the terminal, I found a power outlet and plugged it in, and as soon as I did, the PMU reset and then it worked fine. Getting hit with x-rays or other em fields can be very disruptive to active electronics.
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#11 |
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Prospect
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 26
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A couple of months ago I took my iPod to DC to attend a conference. The conference was very high security so every time I went between buildings (several times a day) my poor iPod had to either go through the X-Ray or even worse be ogled by some security guard. I probably passed the iPod through the x-ray machine nine or ten times in three days. The good news is that neither the x-rays or the security guards hurt the iPod. The bad news is that it fell out of my pocked in a taxi.
In a city like DC with 10,000 individual cab owners there was pretty much no chance I'd ever find it again. My opinion: when traveling don't sweat the x-rays, but be very careful not to leave your iPod lying around. |
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#12 |
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League Commissioner
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Tokyo
Posts: 6,046
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D'OH!!!
Marge, it happened again. |
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#13 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Prospect
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 26
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Yeah it took a couple of weeks before I could bear to look at www.apple.com again
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