Do YOU own a Samsung Galaxy Note 7? What owners can do as Samsung suspends production of handset and U.S carriers stop selling them after more reports they catch fire

  • Regulators ordered a recall of the original Note 7 in late September
  • Now replacement versions have also overheated or caught fire
  • Samsung says it is 'temporarily adjusting ' Note 7 production 

Worries about the safety of Samsung's replacement Galaxy Note 7 smartphones has consumers fretting about what to do. 

And they're getting little guidance from the company.

U.S. regulators ordered a recall of the original Note 7, a huge phone-bordering-on-tablet with a huge battery, in late September after the devices demonstrated an unwelcome tendency to catch fire. 

Now, following reports that the company's replacement versions have also overheated or caught fire , Samsung says it is 'temporarily adjusting ' Note 7 production to 'ensure quality and safety matters.'

A visitor tries out a Samsung Electronics Galaxy Note 7 smartphone at the company's shop in Seoul in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Oct. 10, 2016. Samsung Electronics has temporarily halted production of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphones, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported Monday, following reports that replacements for the fire-prone phones were also overheating.

A visitor tries out a Samsung Electronics Galaxy Note 7 smartphone at the company's shop in Seoul in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Oct. 10, 2016. Samsung Electronics has temporarily halted production of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphones, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported Monday, following reports that replacements for the fire-prone phones were also overheating.

But it neither confirmed nor denied a previous report by South Korea's Yonhap news agency that it has suspended production of the phones. 

Samsung said it's investigating the recent fires and working together with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.

The four major U.S. mobile carriers, meanwhile, have all suspended trade-ins for the replacement phones; so have major retailers such as Best Buy. 

Instead, these companies are offering to swap Note 7s out for any other smartphone of the customer's choice.

Here's a look at the options for Note 7 owners. 

Carpet in an area of the plane was where the device was dropped was burned by the overheating device, but it was the only damage to the aircraft, authorities said.

Carpet in an area of the plane was where the device was dropped was burned by the overheating device, but it was the only damage to the aircraft, authorities said.

SWAP FOR A DIFFERENT SAMSUNG PHONE

Samsung's equivalent phones are mostly, well, old. If you just dropped several hundred dollars on the latest Samsung device, do you really want to trade it for last year's model?

One option is Samsung's Galaxy S smartphone, which is slightly smaller and cheaper than the Note. While it has many of the same features of the Note, it lacks a stylus and the Note 7's iris scanner. The phone also came out in March, which might render it perilously close to middle-aged where cutting-edge types are concerned.

An older version of the Note is also an option, though also a disappointing one, given that the Note 5 (there was no Note 6) launched more than a year ago. Many Note 7 owners may already own one, or recently traded theirs in to get the Note 7.

WHY WERE THE BATTERIES EXPLODING?  

Lithium batteries are use in a range of consumer electronic devices, favored by manufacturers because they are lightweight and pack much more energy into a small space than other power cells.

But storing so much energy in a tiny space, with combustible components separated by ultra-thin walls, makes them susceptible to overheating if exposed to high temperatures, damage or flaws in manufacturing. 

If the separators fail, a chemical reaction can quickly escalate out of control. 

Koh Dong-jin, Samsung's mobile president told reporters in Seoul: 'The flaw in the manufacturing process resulted in the negative electrodes and the positive electrodes coming together.'

It is unclear how Samsung failed to discover the battery problem before launching the Note 7.  

SWAP FOR A PHONE MADE BY SOMEONE ELSE

Google's new Pixel phones are coming out later this month, while LG and HTC also have large Android smartphones of varying ages on the market.

Apple's iPhone 7 also recently launched, and has been fairly well received even though it no longer features the standard headphone jack. That means Note 7 owners would need adapters for their old earbuds; it might also be jarring to switch from an Android phone to the iPhone.

WAIT IT OUT

The obvious downside: Potential overheating and fire for those who insist on using their Note 7s. If you have an older phone lying around that you could reactivate for a while, this might not be a bad choice. Just make sure to power the Note 7 down and remove its battery before tossing it in a drawer.

It's possible that company and government investigations will determine that the fires, at least those involving the replacement phones, were just isolated incidents. Or Samsung might release another replacement phone that's actually safe before long.

It's too early to tell. 

In the meantime, better safe than sorry. 

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