Airport security follies
Airport security follies
Liz's best friend (Tina) took a flying cattlecar out of Logan yesterday. Everything went fine...until she went through security. The metal detector went off. I am not certain of the details (Liz was laughing too hard to give me any) but the verdict is: multiple piercings (not counting earrings, Tina has about a dozen) WILL set off the metal detectors.
She almost missed her flight...because she and the security agent got into a long discussion about her tattoos.
And she is now firmly in my camp: if she cannot drive somewhere, she does not need to be there!
She almost missed her flight...because she and the security agent got into a long discussion about her tattoos.
And she is now firmly in my camp: if she cannot drive somewhere, she does not need to be there!
Treat Gaza like Carthage.
Re: Airport security follies
Can the piercings be changed for non-metallic ones, or taken out, for flying?
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Airport security follies
Many years ago a friend of my set off a metal detector with his Prince Albert. Hearing "it's jewelry" when the wand got waved over his crotch was enough to get the security guy to make a hasty retreat. Nowadays, they probably would have forced him to drop his pants then and there.
"Hang on while I log in to the James Webb telescope to search the known universe for who the fuck asked you." -- James Fell
Re: Airport security follies
Yes, usually...but Tina didn't. The thought simply never occurred to her.Gob wrote:Can the piercings be changed for non-metallic ones, or taken out, for flying?
Treat Gaza like Carthage.
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Re: Airport security follies
Spoken like someone who doesn't have relatives (and a free place to stay) in Hawai'i. If it weren't for that, I'd be in your camp too.Jarlaxle wrote:And she is now firmly in my camp: if she cannot drive somewhere, she does not need to be there!
ETA: I don't think an Amphicar would work for that trip.

People who are wrong are just as sure they're right as people who are right. The only difference is, they're wrong.
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Re: Airport security follies
I have no desire to ever visit Hawaii even if you PAID me to...so you are correct.
Treat Gaza like Carthage.
Re: Airport security follies
I was under the impression that piercing material was stainless steele. If so it should not set off a magnetic scanner.
I expect to go straight to hell...........at least I won't have to spend time making new friends.
Re: Airport security follies
Jarlaxle wrote:I have no desire to ever visit Hawaii even if you PAID me to...so you are correct.
Not "paid", "Leid".
First thing off the plane you get Leid by nice young woman like this:

yrs,
rubato
Re: Airport security follies
Some types are non-magnetic and some are depending on the alloy. Our kitchen knives are magnetic and we put them on a magnet strip attached to the side of the cabinet.Miles wrote:I was under the impression that piercing material was stainless steele. If so it should not set off a magnetic scanner.
http://www.physlink.com/education/askexperts/ae546.cfm
"...
As for whether they are magnetic, the answer is that it depends. There are several families of stainless steels with different physical properties. A basic stainless steel has a 'ferritic' structure and is magnetic. These are formed from the addition of chromium and can be hardened through the addition of carbon (making them 'martensitic') and are often used in cutlery. However, the most common stainless steels are 'austenitic' - these have a higher chromium content and nickel is also added. It is the nickel which modifies the physical structure of the steel and makes it non-magnetic.
So the answer is yes, the magnetic properties of stainless steel are very dependent on the elements added into the alloy, and specifically the addition of nickel can change the structure from magnetic to non-magnetic. ... "
I suppose you could check your piercing materials with a magnet before heading off to the airport, or even take a magnet with you when you buy it. The body-scanners will pick it up but I expect the TSA people will see so much of it they will readily identify it by shape and location.
yrs,
rubato
Re: Airport security follies
It has been my understanding that the cheaper the stainless steel, the more magnetic it will be.
Re: Airport security follies
No, it has more to do with the other properties you are trying to give the steel.Joe Guy wrote:It has been my understanding that the cheaper the stainless steel, the more magnetic it will be.
yrs,
rubato
Re: Airport security follies
My understanding probably comes from quality of tableware. The more expensive sets are not magnetic.rubato wrote:No, it has more to do with the other properties you are trying to give the steel.Joe Guy wrote:It has been my understanding that the cheaper the stainless steel, the more magnetic it will be.
yrs,
rubato
Re: Airport security follies
...because they have less ferrous iron in them. This makes them less magnetic, and prevents them from rusting.
However, I think metal detectors can identify many sorts of metals, just magnetic ones.
However, I think metal detectors can identify many sorts of metals, just magnetic ones.
Re: Airport security follies
I agree.loCAtek wrote:...because they have less ferrous iron in them. This makes them less magnetic, and prevents them from rusting.
However, I think metal detectors can identify many sorts of metals, just magnetic ones.
If only magnetic things could be detected, the detectors would be useless.
Re: Airport security follies
They can: offhand, coins will set them off. The only ferrous coin I can think of used in the last 100 years is the penny, made of steel for one year (1943) due to wartime copper shortages.loCAtek wrote:...because they have less ferrous iron in them. This makes them less magnetic, and prevents them from rusting.
However, I think metal detectors can identify many sorts of metals, just magnetic ones.
Many of Tina's piercings ARE nonmagnetic (surgical steel or titanium), they set off the detector anyway.
Treat Gaza like Carthage.
Re: Airport security follies
Right.Joe Guy wrote:My understanding probably comes from quality of tableware. The more expensive sets are not magnetic.rubato wrote:No, it has more to do with the other properties you are trying to give the steel.Joe Guy wrote:It has been my understanding that the cheaper the stainless steel, the more magnetic it will be.
yrs,
rubato
SS Flatware is now "expensive".
yrs,
rubato
Re: Airport security follies
Thank you one and all for the information. I have no metal adornments other than the staples in my chest, from open heart surgeries, which are stainless but I am always interested in learning new things. 
I expect to go straight to hell...........at least I won't have to spend time making new friends.
