TOKYO - Toshiba is recalling worldwide 340,000 batteries made by Sony Corp.
for its laptops because of problems in recharging them, the latest in a series
of embarrassing battery problems for long-respected Sony.
A Toshiba notebooA
Toshiba notebook. Japanese electronics giant Toshiba is to recall 340,000
laptop computers worldwide due to defective batteries made by rival Sony,
which is already facing woes over its batteries.
[AFP] |
The batteries sometimes stop recharging or run out of power, but no injuries
or other accidents have been reported, Toshiba Corp. spokesman Keisuke Omori
said Tuesday, while declining to give the number for reported problems.
The defect is not directly related to the problem behind last month's recall
of Sony batteries by Dell and Apple, which cited concerns that the batteries
could overheat and catch fire.
Dell Inc. asked customers to return 4.1 million faulty laptop batteries,
while Apple Computer Inc. recalled 1.8 million batteries worldwide.
In both those cases, the troubled lithium-ion batteries were made by Sony
Energy Devices Corp., a Japan-based subsidiary of Sony Corp.
Tuesday's recall affects 100,000 laptop batteries in the U.S., 45,000 in
Japan, and the rest in other parts of the world, Omori said.
The problems are found in some of the battery packs for Dynabook and
Satellite laptop models manufactured by Tokyo-based Toshiba from March through
May this year, and they will be replaced for free, he said.
The series of production problems at Sony comes at a crucial time when the
Tokyo-based electronics and entertainment company behind the Walkman portable
player and PlayStation video game machines has been trying to bolster its brand
image under the leadership of its first foreign executive, Welsh-born Howard
Stringer.
Earlier this month, Sony said it would postpone the European launch of its
PlayStation 3 by four months to March over problems with producing a component
in the Blu-ray disc part of the machine.
The much-awaited upgrade console is set to hit stores in November in the
United States and Japan as planned, but fewer units will be available, according
to Ken Kutaragi, the executive in charge of the project.
Last week, Sony said it will postpone by a week until September 23 the
Japanese launch of its new digital Walkman because of a malfunction of an
unspecified part of the portable music player.
Sony has been fighting to make a comeback after falling behind Apple in
portable music players and other rivals, including Samsung Electronics Co. of
South Korea, in flat-panel TVs _ both hit electronics products in recent years.
Sony has been successful in selling slimmed down TVs lately with panels made in
a joint venture with Samsung.
Sony shares edged down 0.8 percent to close at 4,930 yen (US$42; euro33) in
Tokyo, while Toshiba shares climbed 0.5 percent to 796 yen (US$6.70;
euro5.30).