European iPhone Chargers Prone To Overheating 128
jones_supa sends word that Apple has launched an exchange program for European iPhone USB power adapters. The company says its A1300 adapters were bundled with the iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, and iPhone 4S models, and were also sold on their own from Oct. 2009 to Sept. 2012. The reason for the recall is that the adapters "may overheat and pose a safety risk." No further details are provided (a YouTube video shows a teardown of the device).
That sucks. (Score:5, Funny)
"May" is not a synonym for "prone". (Score:2)
Re:"May" is not a synonym for "prone". (Score:5, Insightful)
Usually they don't issue recalls over completely unsubstantiated hypotheticals.
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I think you're mistaking prone for meaning "more likely than not" or some other highly specific threshold. That's not the definition.
adj. Having a tendency; inclined: paper that is prone to yellowing; children who are prone to mischief.
That's a totally reasonable usage of the word, and not even remotely hyperbolic.
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No, I'm "blinded" by basic respect for the conventional understanding of the English language, and not being literally insane.
What the hell is wrong with you?
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I think 'Prone to' is fine here. Apparently the iPhone chargers are more prone to starting on fire than a standard charger would be expected to. It's a relative thing.
Ford Pintos were prone to starting on fire. Not even a small minority of them actually did, though.
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Apple didn't even say "may". They said "in rare cases". Sure, that is CYA wording but twisting that into saying it is prone to overheating is simply baiting.
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Apple obviously does.
This isn't a 3rd party saying it, this is Apple themselves.
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On the one hand, I have used cheap generic chargers bought in the US with no problems in European outlets.
On the other hand, there are different electrical standards in play here.
Still. I've used the cheapest parts I could lay my hands on and never managed a fire or explosion.
Re: "May" is not a synonym for "prone". (Score:2)
I used to buy cheap chargers but after reading this article, I changed my mind: www.righto.com/2012/03/inside-cheap-phone-charger-and-why-you.html
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Sigh (Score:5, Funny)
From the "geniuses of design" that brought you "drag the cd to the wastebin to eject it", "no physical cd eject button", "imacs with power buttons you can't feel on the back of them", "phones that you lose signal on if you hold while using them to call" and more...
Now we have "over-stuffed proprietary charger that overheats".
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Butthurt over what? Care to show that even 1% of 1% of iPhone users have even voiced such a complaint?
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Neither does a clitoris or a nipple, but people have successfully used them for millennia. ;-)
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Neither does a clitoris or a nipple, but people have successfully used them for millennia. ;-)
theres no part of the clitoris or the female orgasm that is necessary for anything.
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Wow for a multi-billion dollar company.
6 Problems over the course of 20 years. Not too bad.
And a lot of these Problems you stated are just your personal gripes not actually real problems.
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If only it were those six... Overheating CPUs due to excessive thermal paste, moisture sensors that invalidated your warranty due to high humidity, using cheap 6 bit panels but claiming "millions of colours", batteries that die quickly due to having to support an inadequate charger during heavy loads, being able to crash any app by typing "file:///"... Of course many other companies are no better, the point being that Apple screw up as much as anyone.
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Disconnect data cable from CD/DVD drive. Power up PC. Press eject button. It works.
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Aren't we supposed to call embedded software "firmware"? You're grasping at straws here, anyway. It's a physical button that's part of the drive, talking to a controller that's also part of the drive.
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Protip: Cheetos dust isn't good for electronics.
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Along came Macintosh, and Apple was determined to do things "right"
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It's the worst possible solution to that problem. The route everyone else took of putting a physical eject button on the CD drive that made the drive's firmware spit the disc out is the correct way to go. The computer gets notified and burners won't eject during a write, and most importantly even if the computer locks up or won't boot you can always get the disc out. Apple even forgot to make the emergency eject hole accessible.
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You CAN get the disc out on a Mac, two ways: 1) Power up while holding down the mouse button. This causes the boot firmware to eject the disc; and
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The point is, the lack of an eject button was not some stupid aesthetic thing, something to make the computer look better - it grew out of a very real problem that needed solving.
False and you have proven that when you mentioned that CD's also have that "problem". The presence of a button means nothing at all. Try ejecting a CD while burning it, or while ripping an ISO, or while doing any action with any software that has the sense to lock the eject button.
Post floppy disk, all eject buttons ARE software actions in control of the OS, hence the physical hole next to the CD which allows you to override the locking mechanism with a paperclip.
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THAT is not an eject button.
Tell your average granny or joe sixpack off the street to go take a paperclip to that stupid little hole an they will look at you like you've got a second head.
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Home plate is base after third in baseball.
Players run from third to home when they score.
As such, those are all home runs.
Also, you're an idiot.
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Push the eject HOLE with your finger and see what (doesn't) happen.
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I know how that feels.
signed,
Zaphod Beeblebrox.
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That is not a button, it's a HOLE. It says so right in the picture.
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perhaps you can show us where the "eject" button is?
Top-right hand corner of the keyboard.
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Tell that to g5 iMacs, intel iMacs, all powerbooks, all macbooks, the mac mini, and ibooks
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It's not a question of it being soft or not. It was a question of getting it out when the machine crashed. The models in question would not let you eject the discs even on boot-up (unlike every other CD drive I've ever seen - supply power, push button, out comes CD - worst that happens is you have be quick before the OS sucks the drive tray back in, or press Pause/Break on the BIOS to give yourself time).
That's not even counting the fact that ALL non-Mac CD drives have a MANUAL emergency eject hole. Pape
Obviously... (Score:5, Funny)
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They're holding it wrong.
Quite incorrect. I believe the late Steve Jobs would tell them they are charging it wrong.
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Careful there, this is a family website.
In Europe (Score:2)
Didn't the EU mandate that phones had to charge with microUSB connectors?
That has to be the stupidest thing since GWB invaded Iraq
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Somewhat, it's not mandatory at this point, it is something you can opt into (which Apple did however). It will become mandatory later. Apple meets the microUSB obligation by offering for sale an adapter (and marketting models with the adapter included) between microUSB and lightning. The adapter is 35€ IIRC.
Strangely, that adapter is one of Apples worst selling accessories.
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Strangeely that costs more than a whole phone plus USB charger and cable.
I thought I was going crazy (Score:1)
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After six hours of use, my long pin would be burning hot too.
Prices (Score:1)
Lol, Ebay charger £1, Apples charger £15:
Apple 5w usb plug charger [apple.com]
eBay 5w usb plug charger [ebay.co.uk]
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The $1 iphone charger I took apart was such a poor design and construction. Very little isolation, so unsafe. two transistor resonant style switching setup, cheapest there is. Too small output capacitors making the output very noisy. Though it claimed 1A, it was dropping out by 300mA. Not even close. No input filtering at all. no fuse. I'm surprised the things work at all, really.
That's not to say that it isn't possible to make a good charger for less than a .. whatever ripoff pricing apple charges, $30? Th
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Of course an Apple charger-plug would never over-heat or anything.
Note that £1 ($1.69) includes postage+packing+ebay+paypal fees which means the plug cost...almost nothing, I'm amazed that they can sell it at that price, the charger must only cost a few pennies to make.
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Sure, because all power supplies are created equal, right?
Like a 29$ walmart DVD player is built the same as 150$ one.
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Not talking about features, but the way it's built, output quality, and durability.
Too late to matter (Score:2)
That shit is almost ancient. Who gives a damn?
If something that old haven't burned your house down yet then it's likely to be safe.
They should have used genuine Apple chargers. (Score:1)
Apple themselves warn that non-genuine chargers can lead to overheating and other problems:
http://support.apple.com/kb/HT... [apple.com]
Apple even still recommends Apple chargers.
http://www.apple.com/support/u... [apple.com]
"we recommend getting an Apple USB power adapter."
Talk about throwing rocks, glass houses, shooting yourself in a foot...
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Not surprising (Score:3)
I'm always a little cagey about leaving laptops plugged in unattended nowadays.
Only if you have the original iPhone (Score:2)
Re: Only if you have the original iPhone (Score:1)
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