iPods: Not just metaphorical lightning rods anymore

I love music as much as the next guy, just not when I'm actually out in the real world, which offers much more interesting -- and often critical -- sounds. But I had no idea just how dangerous iPods and their ilk could be until I read this.

From the current New Scientist:

A man in Vancouver, Canada, has discovered the hard way that listening to earphones in a thunderstorm can be a very bad idea. He was jogging while listening to an iPod, when he was struck by lightning. The earphones conducted the electricity through his head, bursting his eardrums and fracturing his jaw.
...

Two long, thin burn marks extended up his chest and the sides of his face, and there were "substantial" burns inside his ears. The sudden expansion of gases in his ears due to the hot earphones ruptured his eardrums, and he was deafened.

A cartilage graft from elsewhere in his body was used to patch up the ear-drums, but the patient still has 50% hearing loss and must use hearing aids, Heffernan told New Scientist.

The injuries have since healed, but in case you were wondering, "the iPod was destroyed irreparably."

Tags

More like this

The popular press loves to harp on iPods, and their potential to cause hearing loss due to loud music pumped through embedded earbuds. Looks like there's something else, a little more drastic and a lot less common to worry about in regards to your hearing: getting struck by lightning while wearing…
Hey Wall Street Journal! I say boooooo to you and this worthless article on the "impending hearing health crisis." The title of the article ("Resolve to Turn Your Ipod Down") itself is rather silly, now that Ipods come with volume limits under the range of the levels that cause hearing loss. Plus,…
Before 1833 there were no scientists. It was in that year that William Whewell, a British philosopher, geologist, and all-around bright bulb, coined the word scientist. His mentor, the poet Samuel Coleridge, thought the English language needed a term for someone who studied the natural world but…
This week I've been talking a bit about deafness and human hearing. A human cochlea is tiny, and is located in a bony stucture near in the skull called the bulla of the temporal bone. The temporal bone is oft said to be the hardest bone in the body. Predictably, almost all other mammals share this…

This danger is independent of ipods. There was a similar incident many years ago involving a sony walkman. (Yeah, the tape player kind. It was a long time ago.)

Not going to give up my non-iPod mp3 player/memory stick, though I will be sure to avoid wearing it outside in a thunderstorm.

The techno-critter attached to you is unimportant. A metal shaft & rib umbrella hoisted above your head is more likely to "target" you for an electrostatic breakover. There are electric field detectors available for golfers. The cautions are the same: Get to the lowest spot that you can find in a hurry and crouch down with your feet close together and make as much like a sphere as you can. Old Benny the Franklin could have been fried doing his famous experiment. He lucked out & lived to tell about it.
The earphone rig makes you about a foot taller in the wrong place at the wrong time.