Dell recall sparks battery probe

 

Dell laptop battery, AP

The recall is said to be the biggest electrical recall ever

An investigation has begun to see if the problem that led Dell to recall
millions of its notebook computer batteries could affect other brands.

 

This week, 4.1 million of the lithium-ion batteries, made by Sony, were
recalled because of a fire risk.

 

Now the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is trying to find out
if the same batteries in other laptops will suffer the same problem.

 

Sony has said it cannot name the other companies for legal reasons.

 

However, computer manufacturers Fujitsu and Lenovo Group Ltd have said they
use Sony lithium-ion batteries in some of their products, but that their
notebook

computers were designed not to overheat.

 

Both companies said they were not recalling any batteries.

 

Hewlett-Packard also said they were not affected by the recall as they do
not use Sony battery packs in their notebook products.

 

'No danger'

 

Sony has said it used the batteries in some of its Vaio notebooks.

 

A spokesperson for Sony said: "Some Vaio notebook series utilized the
batteries in question, but at present we have not received any incident
reports related

to these products.

 

"Sony's Vaio adopts its own design for safety technology, and Sony considers
there is no danger of emission of smoke or fire from these products.

 

"The battery charging system that Vaio uses is different from that of Dell."

 

She added that the fault was most likely linked to the way Dell integrated
the battery into its laptop computers.

 

Sony lithium-ion batteries were used in Dell laptops shipped between April
2004 and July 2006, including the Latitude, Inspiron, XPS and Precision
notebook

models.

 

According to a Dell spokesperson, it affected about 15% of the batteries the
company sold in that period.

 

The recall was issued after six confirmed instances of overheating or fire
in Dell hardware; the company is offering affected consumers free
replacements.

 

It was, said the US consumer safety watchdog, the biggest recall of
electrical products in its history.

 

The CPSC also said they had identified 339 incidents in which lithium
batteries used in laptops and cell phones - not just Dell products -
overheated between

2003 and 2005.

 

Regards,

 

Shadab Husain Mo.9335206224

 

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