Toshiba Recalls More Sony Batteries

By the Betanews Staff | Published July 19, 2007, 10:08 AM

Toshiba is recalling 5,100 laptop batteries sold around the world after three instances of the batteries catching fire, two in Japan and one in Australia. Affected batteries were manufactured by Sony in December 2005 for Toshiba's Dynabook, Dynabook Satellite, Satellite and Tecra lines.

The computer maker said the batteries in question were not part of last year's massive recall of Sony batteries, which affected over 10 million units shipped by Dell, Lenovo, Apple and Sony itself. The problems are caused by metal particles falling into a battery during production, causing it to short circuit. Toshiba previously recalled 340,000 batteries, and the latest recall follows one from Gateway last month.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

Sony is the source of much lulz.

Score: 0

|

So where the hell do I go to check if my Toshiba laptop is going to blow up? God i'm so sick and tired of Sony's awful quality control. It all started with the Playstation for me....

Score: 0

|

Without taking it apart - how do you know whether your Toshiba Satellite has a Sony battery or not anyway?

Score: 0

|

Usually you have to the laptop manufactures web site and find a posting of battery serial number ranges or version numbers to find out. Dell did something like that.

Score: 0

|

Toshiba has a tool on their website that will tesst your battery and let you know, of course it identifies my wife's battery as being fine, her laptop is not one of the models listed, however her battery pack is the one being recalled, and sometimes her laptop gets so hot that it locks up. go figure.

http://www.csd.toshiba.c...mm.0&ignore_sn=true

Score: 0

|

Yet even more exploding Sony batteries... it simply doesn't stop.
You must be really suicidal to still use any Sony batteries anymore.

Just good that the PS3 doesn't have batteries, or we'd have lots of eploding PS3s as well.

Score: 0

|

I think I read it somewhere that Sony DO NOT use their own battery.

Score: 0

|

The bad thing you have no way of telling who makes the battery. The company name is usually not on it.

Score: 0

|

Once they put their name on it, it is their responsibility.

Score: 0

|

CMOS BATTERY haha kablewie

Score: 0

|

Someone really needs to invent something better than the battery.

Score: 0

|

That's not the point.
Someone (i.e. Sony) needs to actually give a damn for quality and start doing quality controls for their batteries.

Score: 0

|

But we are Sony and everything we make is perfect, no need to test. :0

Score: 0

|

Didn't say it was the point.
I said it's about time someone invented something better.

Score: 0

|

Will Firefox beat IE9 to Direct2D rendering?

Just days after Microsoft executives gave conference attendees a peek at a new rendering technology, a Mozilla contributor revealed he's working on the same thing.

AOL's decision to rebrand as Aol. takes a bad brand and makes it worse

The idea behind the social Web is to crowd source before bringing out something new. But not at AOL, which new logo debuted with a cry of "fail!" across the blogosphere and Twittersphere today.

Microsoft's Bob Muglia and Ray Ozzie on Silverlight vs. standards

Bob Muglia: "We're trying to provide people with an environment that has capabilities that you just simply can't do today in the standards-based world."

Uh-oh, netbooks -- not Windows 7 -- will lift 2009 PC sales

Santa may bring a lump of coal to the Windows PC industry this holiday season. Netbook sales will sap PC margins, while weak Windows 7 PC sales could further drive down average selling prices.

Kindle 2 update adds battery life, native PDF reader

Amazon has pushed out an update to the Kindle 2 e-reader that lengthens battery life and adds a native PDF viewer.

Safari on iPhone gets competition from a $1 browser app

Apple likes to say it gives iPhone users a full browsing experience, but a new competitor tries to incorporate more desktop browser features.

Action Replay maker sues Microsoft for Xbox 360 'predatory technological barriers'

Third-party video game accessory maker Datel has filed an antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft over the Xbox 360's recent Dashboard update.

Where there's smoke: Apple warranty stance raises troubling questions

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: Smoking can be dangerous not only for your lungs, it appears, but for your Apple hardware warranty.

Microsoft's .NET Micro Framework is now free and open source

The latest version of Microsoft's .NET Micro framework is now in the hands of the FOSS community.

Google's value proposition for Chrome OS: Should we feel insulted?

For a search engine that has direct access to all the world's online history, it appears to have taught Google nothing about selling a machine.

E-book readers will be in short supply this holiday season

E-readers are hot this year, and a lot of compelling new products have been released, but are there enough electrophoretic displays to go around?