Friday, March 20th 2009
Some Acer Predator Gaming PCs Recalled Due to Overheating Issues
We would like to inform you that Acer today recalled some of its Predator premium gaming PCs due to overheating issues. The reason: the insulation on the computer's internal wiring can become bent or stripped, causing the wires to overheat while the product is in use. This poses a burn hazard to consumers. Until now two reports of computers short circuiting, resulting in melted internal components and external casing have been sent. The affected models include model numbers ASG7200 and ASG7700 developed from May 2008 through December 2008. Consumers of the affected machines should stop using them and contact Acer for a free repair. See the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission recall alert posted here for more information.
Source:
CPSC
29 Comments on Some Acer Predator Gaming PCs Recalled Due to Overheating Issues
How did they manage to overheat cables? :wtf:
Cheap PSU or something?
Pre-build FTL.
Faster. Deeper. Harder. Further
:roll:
I love how this thread about overheating issues, melting cases, risk to human health via electric shock, has turned into how everyone wants the case.
Maybe they mean cheap wiring.
hehe..
yeah well seriously, that casing looks like fail in the airflow dept.
Also it uses lc for the cpu but not for the sb, nb and mosfets... I don't know what would be the point of it. On a normal mainboard, that has a cool chipset, it's OK, but if the chipset cooler has a heatpipe system and fins I guess it would require better air flow and probably it was meant to be used with a regular cpu cooler that would blow air over the mainboard... otherwise I can figure how that would increase the overall temperature inside the case.
I know Acer mainly more or less focuses on budget to mid range laptops/pcs while also having fairly hi-end systems/laptops. but anyone with half a brain would no doubt spend their hard earned cash to buy from a more reputable & reliable source then Acer who have more then 20-30 'hate' groups on facebook & myspace (not all together of course 30+ = facebook | 30+ =myspace). - do yourself a favour, stay away from ACER/Gateway so you dont need to spend a month waiting for them to send your laptop/pc back to you when you RMA it.
Acer cutting corners doesnt do them any favours both with their already tarnished dodgy reputation & their future/existing customer base.
saying that - just like everything else, when it works its great when it breaks you're in it for the duration.
I personally feel Acer, like always opted for the cheap way out. Although the case itself would not be to blame, unless the chasis eats into the cables or touches something when the case becomes closed, they still managed to release an unbenched chasis. This type of mistake is what leads to the destruction of any half worthy company.
Ive never bought an Acer case, and after this incident, i dont think ill ever consider them. I have used Acer products in the past, for example their laptops and never had a hardware issue, but then again, pre-quadcore laptops arnt worth talking about.
Does this, would this, is this making Acer liable for the entire pc, are they responsible for entire replacements here ? What happens if a client wishes their money back for a faulty good sold ? Norti Acer. . .
That's one BAD looking case, it's seriously the worst looking thing I've seen in ages. Looks like the designer took a Transformers trip from memory lane...but he was already fired from his designing job 5 years ago :roll:
This is so ugly I wouldn't give it to my ex-mother in law (though it looks a bit like a vacuum cleaner :laugh: )
Thanks for the laugh
Wires got stripped of their insulation. Probably got caught in the door or something, cause the guys making these things arent paid to do cable management.
Stripped wires caused a small short, which led to the wires overheating - then the rest of the wires started melting.
I've had this happen when someone hooked a 7V fan adaptor of mine back into the 12V rail, it melted all the wiring in between to the floor of the case.