My question is regarding what would happen in such a trial. Where does
the burden fall? Would the plaintiff have to prove that the computer
started the fire without any user misuse? The manufacturer can claim
their product is NRLT and state that if their product did catch on fire
it would have to be caused by misuse by the user. Is there ever a third
part investigator who can determine the cause? In stalemate cases, who
prevails?

I have worked on computers from individuals and companies where I cannot
figure out why it didn't start on fire. I've opened up PCs with so much
dust and lint built up inside you cannot even find the motherboard.
Computers with non-working fans, mouse nests and chewed up wires, dead
bugs, cigarette smoke residue with dust so think I had to scrap it off
with a putty knife. One computer was from a small factory where they did
metal grinding and the computer was full of metal dust (very flammable).
And we have all seen how people put their PCs on the floor or desk and
pile papers and junk all around it as well as the monitor (my wife's
computer is like that). A fire waiting to happen. Are computer
manufacturers responsible if one of these catch fire?

The Other Brian
 


From: Arthur Michael [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2008 11:58 AM
To: Kunde, Brian
Cc: Brian O'Connell; [email protected]
Subject: RE: fire hazards from cheap computers ?

Hello Brian, et al,

With respect to your comment below re NRTL Listed products and related
"troubles":

I'll bet Dell or HP (your examples) and most others, have had their
share of "troubles" and could tell you "tales" that would curl your
hair.

Do remember that the electrical safety standards are minimum
requirements; There are plenty of opportunities for things to go "wrong"
(including substituted parts, counterfeit components, poor manufacturing
techniques, etc.).

If you check the CPSC Recall Lists, you'll find a number of NRTL Listed
Products exhibiting "troubles". Most of the majors have at least one
recall at some time in the past (and, I only searched on their category
- "Computer Equipment" and disregarded the recent flurry of
battery-related "troubles".

Best regards, Art

Int'l Product Safety News
A.E. Michael, Editor
P.O. Box 1561 INT
Middletown CT 06457-8061 U.S.A.

Phone  :  (860) 344-1651
Email  :  [email protected]
Website:  http://www.safetylink.com
ISSN   :  1040-7529

===========================================

On Thu, 17 Jan 2008, Kunde, Brian wrote:

> Dell and HP products would be NRTL listed, so how much trouble could 
> they get into?
>
> The Other Brian
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Brian 
> O'Connell
> Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2008 11:05 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: fire hazards from cheap computers ?
>
> http://itnews.com.au/News/68096,dell-hp-computers-sparked-catastrophic
> -f
> ir
> es-lawsuits-claim.aspx
>
> As these are not related to battery problems in portable machines, can

> we assume cheap garbage power supplies ?
>
> I attempted to find a supporting trend on the U.S. CPSC, but no joy.
> Anyone have any root-cause information of these flame-outs ?
>
> R/S,
> Brian
>
> -
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LECO Corporation Notice:  This communication may contain confidential
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