The world's largest manufacturer of personal computers, Dell, is to recall 4.1 million of its notebook computer batteries because of a fire risk.
Most batteries are in computers sold in the United States but more than 1m are believed to be outside the US.
Dell says it knows of six instances since December when the batteries, made by Sony, overheated or caught fire.
The US body responsible for consumer safety says it is the biggest recall of electrical products in its history.
A spokesman for the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), Scott Wolfson, said users of affected laptops should only run the machines on a power cord.
'Rare cases'
The Sony lithium-ion batteries were placed in laptops shipped between April 2004 and July 2006.
They were included in some models of Dell's Latitude, Inspiron, XTS and precision mobile workstation notebooks.
"In rare cases, a short-circuit could cause the battery to overheat, causing a risk of smoke and or fire," said Dell spokesman Ira Williams.
"It happens in rare cases but we opted to take this broad action immediately."
Dell has already launched a website (www.dellbatteryprogram.com) telling customers how to get a free replacement battery.
No injuries have been linked to Dell laptops with defective batteries, the company was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.
The CPSC has identified 339 incidents in which lithium batteries used in laptops and cell phones - not just Dell products - overheated between 2003 and 2005.
Some incidents involved minor skin burns or actual injuries as well as property damage, Mr Wolfson said.
Dell recalls 4m+ notebook batteries
Moderator: Thanas
Dell recalls 4m+ notebook batteries
Beeb
*Checks Inspiron 9300 battery*
Nope, not part of the recall.
Damn, there goes my hope of getting a brand new battery.
BTW, can't Sony do anything right these days?
Nope, not part of the recall.
Damn, there goes my hope of getting a brand new battery.
BTW, can't Sony do anything right these days?
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I'm curious, if the batteries are faulty (and not an excuse to cover up for poor heat management of the notebooks on Dell's part), why would Sony's own line of notebooks be unaffected?
Do they not use thier own batteries, or are batteries destined for Sony's own use held to higher QC standards?
That said, this is sucky news, since i just paid Dell for a Inspiron 6400.....
Do they not use thier own batteries, or are batteries destined for Sony's own use held to higher QC standards?
That said, this is sucky news, since i just paid Dell for a Inspiron 6400.....
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My 9300 appears to manage heat pretty well, and the battery itself gets only a little warm to the touch under extended use or charging.
As for Sony, my guess is that right now their laptop division execs have their collective heads up their asses and are blissfully unaware of the scale of the problem.
Or they could just not give a damn given Sony's reputation for having about the worst QC and customer support in the computer business.
As for Sony, my guess is that right now their laptop division execs have their collective heads up their asses and are blissfully unaware of the scale of the problem.
Or they could just not give a damn given Sony's reputation for having about the worst QC and customer support in the computer business.
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Well, well, well, this could be the reason why my friend's Dell is so god damn hot! *e-mails article to friend*
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I could ask the same question about who'll continue to defend HP/Compaq/Apple/Gateway, or any other PC maker who bought bad batteries from Sony or LG.General Zod wrote:I wonder how many people will still continue to defend Dells as good machines after this little incident. . .
Besides, almost all laptops (Lenovos are a notable exception) are made by the same few ODM's for resale by corporate customers such as Apple, Dell, etc.
In fact, here's the 9300 as offered direct by the ODM.
Speaking of Apple and battery recalls
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I guess that this was one of the more public failures.
Bad Sony, bad. They really need a remedial in QC.
Bad Sony, bad. They really need a remedial in QC.
Hum, I've just check in their website and I'm using a Latitude D610 with an affected battery. I contacted our IT department (we have several D610 here) and they're now filling the forms in the website for replacements. The instructions says that is safe to use the computer with the power cord... and to think that just yesterday I've used this very own computer on the battery all day.
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I don't recall any of those companies having recalls of over 4 million units.Glocksman wrote: I could ask the same question about who'll continue to defend HP/Compaq/Apple/Gateway, or any other PC maker who bought bad batteries from Sony or LG.
Not that I'd buy from either of them anyways. I tend to limit myself to a very few specific laptop brands.
Nice to see that my choice of going with a Lenovo for my next laptop upgrade is continuing to be justified then.Besides, almost all laptops (Lenovos are a notable exception) are made by the same few ODM's for resale by corporate customers such as Apple, Dell, etc.
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Ummm... 4 million batteries were recalled, and 6 had caught fire. That's a catastrophic failure rate of... .00015%. That's not especially bad on any company's part, although clearly the batteries should have been recalled. Put another way, they would've had to have tested well over a half-million batteries thoroughly in order to have any realistic chance of replicating this flaw even once. I don't think that anyone's Q&C can be expected to catch that flaw, if it gets through the design phase.
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Curses. My laptop is of an affected type, but my worn out battery is not one of the affected models. I thought for a moment I might get a free new battery, but no such luck.
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The NYT articel I read about this puts the *Potential* total failure rate much, much higher. Closer to several hundred units that have had this problem.Master of Ossus wrote:Ummm... 4 million batteries were recalled, and 6 had caught fire. That's a catastrophic failure rate of... .00015%. That's not especially bad on any company's part, although clearly the batteries should have been recalled. Put another way, they would've had to have tested well over a half-million batteries thoroughly in order to have any realistic chance of replicating this flaw even once. I don't think that anyone's Q&C can be expected to catch that flaw, if it gets through the design phase.
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Assuming that "several hundred"=400, that's still a failure rate of only .01%, requiring thorough testing of about 10,000 batteries to catch a single malfunction, on average. That's much worse, but realistically there are many more dangerous products that have passed faulty QC checks in the past.MariusRoi wrote:The NYT articel I read about this puts the *Potential* total failure rate much, much higher. Closer to several hundred units that have had this problem.Master of Ossus wrote:Ummm... 4 million batteries were recalled, and 6 had caught fire. That's a catastrophic failure rate of... .00015%. That's not especially bad on any company's part, although clearly the batteries should have been recalled. Put another way, they would've had to have tested well over a half-million batteries thoroughly in order to have any realistic chance of replicating this flaw even once. I don't think that anyone's Q&C can be expected to catch that flaw, if it gets through the design phase.
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Shucks, I needa new battery - mine only last 15 minutes after only a year (probably really is a bad idea to leave laptop on lying on a sofa or bed or carpet as a habit- wouldn't be such of a problem if dell laptops had better ventilation).
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If you cover up the air vents, I don't really think the brand matters much.
As for battery life, the advice I was given was to initially run it through a full charge/discharge cycle, charge it fully again, run it down to 40% and then pull it out and store it in a cool dry place until you need it.
It seems to work as I still get 2 hours or so out of my year and a half old battery.
As for battery life, the advice I was given was to initially run it through a full charge/discharge cycle, charge it fully again, run it down to 40% and then pull it out and store it in a cool dry place until you need it.
It seems to work as I still get 2 hours or so out of my year and a half old battery.
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Glocksman wrote:If you cover up the air vents, I don't really think the brand matters much.
As for battery life, the advice I was given was to initially run it through a full charge/discharge cycle, charge it fully again, run it down to 40% and then pull it out and store it in a cool dry place until you need it.
It seems to work as I still get 2 hours or so out of my year and a half old battery.
It is if the vents are on the bottom...
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Cheap chassis designs are quite a problem. You shouldn't need to be sitting at a solid perfectly level desk every time you want to use one, they are meant to be portable.Pu-239 wrote:Glocksman wrote:If you cover up the air vents, I don't really think the brand matters much.
As for battery life, the advice I was given was to initially run it through a full charge/discharge cycle, charge it fully again, run it down to 40% and then pull it out and store it in a cool dry place until you need it.
It seems to work as I still get 2 hours or so out of my year and a half old battery.
It is if the vents are on the bottom...