apple
Report a problem

Danish consumer agency finds design flaw in Apple iBook

Slimy   on 04 May 2007 - 18:30 · 4 comments & 3100 views

Advertisement (Why?)
After receiving complaints from iBook owners that their machines would no longer start up, the Danish Consumer Complaints Board conducted a detailed study of four complaints received between April and November 2006, including a microscopic examination of the faulty machines' motherboards. The board concluded a manufacturing defect caused solder joints around a voltage regulator to be flawed in such a way as to deteriorate each time the computer was turned on or off, resulting in power failures in some of Apple's iBook G4 notebook computers. Using a clamp to apply pressure to the computers' casing, next to the trackpad, closed up the broken joints and allowed the computer to start.

Apple was already ordered to refund one Danish customer, with interest, and expects its findings to influence cases elsewhere, said spokesman Frederik Boesgaard Navne. The board, part of Denmark's government-funded National Consumer Agency, had already received 10 complaints about the computers, but since publishing the report at the start of the week has already received five more. Apple has not challenged the contents of the study. Reports of faulty G4 iBooks have surfaced in other countries, and the board has supplied a copy of its findings to lawyers for one owner in the U.S., Navne said. Apple has no obligation to comply with the board's order to refund the customer's money, but "If they don't accept our ruling, we will help the customer sue Apple," Navne said. Apple has so far refused to acknowledge the defect in the iBook G4s.

News source: InfoWorld

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 4 additional comments
#1 krzemien on 04 May 2007 - 19:18
Maybe someone would take a closer look at this as well? I'm one of the victims...

PowerBook Lower Memory Slot failure

http://lowermemoryslot.editkid.com/
(1 reply) #2 Vegetunks on 04 May 2007 - 21:00
Who gives a crap? the iBook is OLD news. MacBooks FTW
#2.1 rm20010 on 04 May 2007 - 22:32
Consumers should have the right to a working product, outdated or not. The best thing Apple can do if they won't honour warranty service is to at least replace it with a similar spec'ed MacBook.
#3 leo221 on 04 May 2007 - 21:14
shut up! it's Microsoft's fault.

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!

Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.

Advertisement (Why?)