
A Lenovo laptop computer that burst into flames at Los Angeles International Airport last Saturday was most likely the result of a defective Sony battery, according to Lenovo spokesman Ray Gorman.
“We can confirm that laptop was a Thinkpad T43 with a Sony battery the same Sony battery that was subject to the recent recalls [by Dell and Apple],” he said.
According to Sony, the defect in those batteries is caused by a short circuit that occurs when microscopic metal particles break through the lithium ion cell wall and make contact with a battery anode.
“Our first priority is public safety, so we’re taking this incident very seriously,” Gorman said. “We’re investigating it thoroughly.”
Within 12 hours of the incident, Lenovo had a team at the airport. They took the notebook and flew it to the Lenovo lab in Japan.
“We should know more about this in the next couple of days,” Gorman said. “But the investigation will take another 24 to 48 hours and then we will do whatever is in the best interests of our customers.”
Linda Rosencrance
Author: Mark Hiratsuka
Laptops & PDAs • Permalink
Tagged with:
Next entry: TGS: Game Show attendance hits record high
Previous entry: TGS: Real fans give PS3 the thumbs up
Support DWT and share the love:
Or try our acclaimed members-only dating site:
C'mon - let's hear it...
Spammers beware: Any links in comments to commercial websites will be treated as paid advertising and will be charged at rate of $10 per link per day. Invoices will be sent to the idiots who hire you for so-called SEO jobs. All you good people will always keep it real, of course - thanks!

Scan the super-duper QR code with your phone camera or