Voluntary Recall On Laptops Battery Due To Fire and Burn Hazard
Another PC notebook computer batteries voluntary recall! The US Consumer Product Safety Commission, in cooperation with Hewlett-Packard, Toshiba and Dell, announced a voluntary recall on the batteries manufactured by Sony Energy Devices Corporation as these lithium-ion batteries can overheat, posing a fire and burn hazard to consumers. This battery model was used for some HP, Toshiba and Dell laptop models from 2004 – 2006. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission warns consumer to stop using it as there have been 19 reports of the batteries overheating, including 17 reports of flames/fire (10 resulting in minor property damage). Two consumers experienced minor burns. To avoid any further damage to the consumers, consumers should contact their computer manufacturer to determine if their battery is included in the recall and to request a free replacement battery.
The recalled batteries were included in the following laptop models:
Hewlett-Packard
HP Pavilion: dv1000, dv8000 and zd8000
Compaq Presario: v2000 and v2400
HP Compaq: nc6110, nc6120, nc6140, nc6220, nc6230, nx4800, nx4820, nx6110, nx6120, nx9600
Note: Recalled batteries will have a bar code label starting with A0, L0, L1 or GC
Toshiba
Satellite: A70/A75, P30/P5, M30X/M35X, M50/M55
Tecra: A3, A5, S2
Dell
Latitude: 110L
Inspiron: 1100, 1150, 5100, 5150, 5160
Note: Battery Model OU091
Read the official announcement from CPSC.
Related Articles
- Acer Battery Recall for TravelMate and Aspires series
- Voluntary Recall to Repair Defective Computers by NEC
- HP Adopts Green Battery Developed by Boston Power for its Next Generation Laptops
- Have Sony Vaio Repaired Or Suffer Possible Burn Threat
- Lenovo (IBM) Recalls ThinkPad Battery Packs
- Lenovo Initiated Recall Program for its ThinkPad Batteries
- Nagasa Annouced Massive Recall on its Portable DVD players
- HP Massively Recalls Notebook Batteries Due to Safety Issue
- Acer Aspire Laptop Recall Due to Microphone Cable Overheat Issue
- Build Location-based Applications with Fire Eagle









































