Free Print Subscription Printer-friendly version Email to a Friend

Toshiba Recalls Additional 1,400 Sony-made laptop batteries

(Top News, 14 Aug 2007 )
By Colleen Taylor, Contributing Editor -- Electronic News,

Nearly one year after prompting a major consumer recall at Dell Inc., Sony Corp.'s defective lithium ion battery packs have prompted yet another consumer recall, this time for Japan-based PC maker Toshiba Corp.

Marking the second of such recalls at Toshiba alone within the past two months, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) last week announced a voluntary recall of some 1,400 rechargeable lithium-ion batteries containing Sony cells used in Toshiba notebook computers.

The defective lithium-ion batteries have been shown to overheat, posing a fire hazard. According to the CPSC, Toshiba has received three reports outside of the United States of notebook batteries overheating. No injuries have been reported.

The batteries were sold with Toshiba's Satellite A100, Satellite A105 and Tecra A7 laptop models, which were sold from January 2006 through April 2006.

For months, Sony has been struggling to recover from its lithium-ion manufacturing mishaps, which triggered large-scale battery recalls over the past year at Dell, Apple Inc., Lenovo Inc., Acer America Corp., and others. In June, Toshiba announced it was implementing further measures to renew its commitment to publicizing the battery recall, after an incident on May 24 when the company announced that a Toshiba portable computer with a Sony battery pack caught fire.

For the most part, however, Sony's bottom line has emerged from the ongoing battery recall turmoil relatively unscathed. On July 26, the company announced its fiscal Q1 earnings report, with sales of $16.75 billion ( 1.97 trillion Japanese yen), up 13.3 percent year-over-year. The company posted Q1 income of $535.2 million (63.14 billion yen), more than doubling the income it took in for Q1 2006.

 
Free Print Subscription Printer-friendly version Email to a Friend
 
Article Rating 
Average Rate: No rating yet
 
Poor Quite Good Good Very Good Excellent
 
Related Content 
 
 
KNOWLEDGE CENTER
Panasonic Key Devices Guide 2008 :
 
Fairchild Semiconductor :
 
Texas Instruments: DaVinci™ Technology
 
Texas Instruments: Safe Bet Series
 
 
 
Highest Rated  
Feedback Loop  

ADS BY GOOGLE 
 
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
Press Release 
 
TECHNOLOGY NEWS
 
RESOURCE CENTER

 
 
PRODUCT NEWS
 
FEATURED SPONSORS
 
 
DESIGN CENTERS
 
ADVERTISEMENT
     
Reference Designs 
   
     
 
 
 


 
 
RSS
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   

POLL
What type of environmental regulation do you think will be most beneficial for the tech industry?
Proper recycling and disposal
Push for power efficiency and energy conservation
Chemical/lead regulation
View results