Airport security confiscated an empty water bottle

Hopefully its all recycled in the end but in the scheme of things miniscule in terms of the paper waste that is generated - say on airplanes
i would hesitate to think what the $ spend would be if Customs/Quarantine embarked on an upgrade to their systems to digitalise the cards. I fear a repeat of the BOM.
The existing cards go to the ABS for data entry (this is where the inbound traveller data comes from) and the cards archived.
 
First time seeing this thread. I sometimes have a metal insulated water bottle which I take on planes so I have a bottle while travelling that stays cool - very handy in Europe with the fountains everywhere (not that kind of fountain). Wondering if they may see fit to take it, I'd have to protest, not that it would do me any good.
By rights you can take your water bottle on board with 99mL of water in it I assume, but I've never tested it.
I was worried enough about toothpaste when I found that the smallest tube in the shops here is 110g....
 
So which countries require some form of arrival documentation, paper or digital? Will the ETA/ESTA type forms do away with paper because those have to be completed on-line?
 
First time seeing this thread. I sometimes have a metal insulated water bottle which I take on planes so I have a bottle while travelling that stays cool - very handy in Europe with the fountains everywhere (not that kind of fountain). Wondering if they may see fit to take it, I'd have to protest, not that it would do me any good.
By rights you can take your water bottle on board with 99mL of water in it I assume, but I've never tested it.
I was worried enough about toothpaste when I found that the smallest tube in the shops here is 110g....
My experience is that no water at all is allowed in an empty bottle. At first they would even query small bottles full of liquid with no volume measure marked on it! (shop marked, not your vivid!)
 
First time seeing this thread. I sometimes have a metal insulated water bottle which I take on planes so I have a bottle while travelling that stays cool - very handy in Europe with the fountains everywhere (not that kind of fountain). Wondering if they may see fit to take it, I'd have to protest, not that it would do me any good.
By rights you can take your water bottle on board with 99mL of water in it I assume, but I've never tested it.
I was worried enough about toothpaste when I found that the smallest tube in the shops here is 110g....
It's the capacity of the bottle/tube that matters, so filling a 1L bottle with 99mL isn't allowed. But empty should be fine. 110g of toothpaste is probably less than 100mL, but it would be nice if it was marked. I've bought empty toothpaste tubes that do have the volume marked.

The one plastic bag thing is also a bit silly in practice, rarely does anyone check each passenger only puts a single bag through, and the person checking the scanner has no way to know. But it's all security theatre anyway so I guess no one's that fussed. Ironically the extra check for some Australian flights might actually uncover this, if it was actually thorough.
 
It's the capacity of the bottle/tube that matters, so filling a 1L bottle with 99mL isn't allowed. But empty should be fine. 110g of toothpaste is probably less than 100mL, but it would be nice if it was marked. I've bought empty toothpaste tubes that do have the volume marked.

The one plastic bag thing is also a bit silly in practice, rarely does anyone check each passenger only puts a single bag through, and the person checking the scanner has no way to know. But it's all security theatre anyway so I guess no one's that fussed. Ironically the extra check for some Australian flights might actually uncover this, if it was actually thorough.
It's 100 ml or 100g, so 110g doesn't work.
 
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