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Kyocera faulty smart-phone batteries recalled

WASHINGTON-Reports of exploding mobile-phone batteries finally hit a high note with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission announcing a voluntary recall of 140,000 of Kyocera Wireless Corp.’s 7135 smart-phone batteries. The federal agency said the faulty batteries can short circuit and “erupt with force or emit excessive heat, posing a burn hazard to consumers.”

For its part, Kyocera said it has ended its relationship with the Hong Kong-based vendor of the battery in question, and it is considering legal action against the company.

The news comes after several reports of exploding batteries from Nokia Corp., Kyocera and others. However, the recall is perhaps the first instance in which a mobile-phone manufacturer has admitted to selling faulty, exploding batteries.

According to the U.S. safety commission, Kyocera reported four battery failures, including one user who suffered a minor burn. The recall covers Kyocera 7135 phones with the “-05” battery sold through Verizon Wireless, U.S. Cellular and Alltel Corp. between September and December 2003. Kyocera’s CDMA 7135 smart phone features the Palm operating system, 16 MB of onboard RAM and an MMC/SD expansion card slot. The phone sells for about $500. Hong Kong-based Coslight International Group built the batteries, which were manufactured in China. The batteries sold for $21.

Kyocera said it immediately halted sales of its 7135 device following reports of a faulty battery. The company said only about 40,000 of the phones made it to end users, and the rest were in the distribution channel. Kyocera said Coslight has built batteries for other Kyocera phones, but the company designed a custom battery for the 7135. Kyocera uses batteries from a variety of vendors.

“We’ve been extremely above the board with this,” said Kyocera spokesman John Chier. “We are considering legal action against this company.”

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