Toshiba recalls batteries ... for the third time

Toshiba is recalling potentially dangerous notebook batteries for the third month in a row due to concerns about potential overheating.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) said 1,400 of the lithium-ion batteries containing Sony-made cells sold with Toshiba laptops pose a fire hazard.

There have been three reports of models with those batteries overheating in other countries, but none of the incidents caused injury, according to the CPSC.

Models affected by the recall include Toshiba's Satellite A100, Satellite A105 and Tecra A7.

Customers whose notebook was made between January through June 2006 are eligible for a free replacement battery from the company by going to Toshiba's battery replacement Web site.

In the meantime, the notebooks can still be used with the power cord and no battery.

Toshiba recalled 5,100 Sony batteries in July, and in June urged customers to send in for a new battery after reports of one catching fire and burning a desk in Great Britain.

However, the latest number of defective batteries is short of last fall's recall, which affected more than 9 million notebooks from most major PC makers.

Advertisement

Talkback 0 comments


Latest Videos

Blogs

  • David Braue Will Rudd's bush backhaul bonanza deliver?
    Rural areas will be welcoming the government's decision to put its money where its politicising is, funnelling $250m into a regional fibre upgrade to six rural centres. Remedying over a decade of near-neglect at the hands of telecoms privatisation, the investment could be the firmest step yet for Labor's NBN dream — but with inevitable political questions and a looming election, Rudd and Conroy need to deliver, and quickly, to preserve the NBN's credibility.
  • Array Doing for AV what VoIP did for telephony
    Sydney-based start-up Audinate is making traditional analog cabling obsolete in favour of TCP/IP-based networking technology. And it's doing a pretty good job so far, with its technology used by World Youth Day and the Sydney Opera House.
  • Array WiMax in Australia: Part two
    WiMax could be the standard that drives the next phase of mobile broadband, it provides an opportunity for players wanting to establish a pure IP network to carry voice and data effectively — but is this what operators want?
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured