Using a cell phone on a plane will interfere with navigation and safety systems and cause a crash.
Aircraft avionics operate on dedicated frequencies (navigation at 108–117.975 MHz, communication at 118–136.975 MHz) well-separated from cellular bands (800 MHz and higher); modern planes incorporate electromagnetic shielding that attenuates external signals by 60–100 dB. Engineering analysis and testing by regulatory bodies (FAA, EASA) found no credible interference risk from handheld phones. The ban's origins lie in spectrum allocation concerns: airborne phones operating while flying would transmit to dozens of ground stations simultaneously, creating network congestion and allocation conflicts. As terrestrial networks became saturated, maintaining airborne frequency allocation became economically infeasible. Operators relied on interference fears to justify bans without directly citing spectrum economics. The myth remains firmly entrenched, but the technical basis is historical; modern avionics design explicitly accounts for high radiofrequency environments. Airlines now deploy pico-cells (on-plane WiFi) without causing accidents, validating that phones themselves pose no technical threat, the prohibition persists from regulatory tradition and passenger comfort, not safety engineering.
Reception
Sources
- FAA: Wireless Devices on Aircraft REFERENCE
- Federal Communications Commission: Airborne Flight Services REFERENCE
- IEEE: EMC in Aircraft REFERENCE