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I'm with vodaphone and they've always seemed OK!
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"overheating or arching within the socket" I'll assume they mean "arcing". Good power supplies......overheating on a few milliwatts. Sounds more like a "buy the expensive branded parts and not the cheap ones" thing. Nothing about the PC power supplies that break interference immunity and safety regs....even though there are thousands in use..
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Rank: Super forum user
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You may think I'm naive but i take this purely as a safety warning and nothing to do with a sales pitch.
Take it or leave it it's your safety after all.
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So, will Lambeth Council Trading Standards be prosecuting the retailers of these dodgy products pursuant to the General Product Safety Regulations 2005? I won't hold my breath...
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Rank: Super forum user
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RayRapp wrote:So, will Lambeth Council Trading Standards be prosecuting the retailers of these dodgy products pursuant to the General Product Safety Regulations 2005? I won't hold my breath... Could always ask them, Ray.
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well it happens to me one's when i buy charger for my CP, coz lots of this things are actually sold in different places here in ME, but now i'm carefull in buying this type of things in the market. i prepare to buy branded charger from the manufacturer itself.
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Rank: Super forum user
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edlancion wrote:well it happens to me one's when i buy charger for my CP, coz lots of this things are actually sold in different places here in ME, but now i'm carefull in buying this type of things in the market. i prepare to buy branded charger from the manufacturer itself. This reminded me of an ipod I once purchase on ebay and from Hong Kong. It came well packaged and looked the real thing but when I charged it for the first time the thing went bang when it exploded in a puff of smoke in my living room. I have never purchased anything from that place since.
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Rank: Super forum user
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ChrisBurns wrote:https://www.thefpa.co.uk/FPA_Home/Advice_and_Guidance/E-newsletter/Latest_issue/Newsletter_detail_page/?ListItemID=1870&ListGroupID=407 I showed this to my wife who recently purchase a cheap charger for her phone. Reading this made her search the house for her proper charger and she found it. The danger here has to be when you put your phone on charge and go to bed.
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one more item here - i once dropped my mobile, no obvious damage, placed on charge - not an issue, on my way to bed called into the kitchen at which point i found my mobile 'red hot and sweating' on the work surface! could't pick it up, charger was still cold, pushed mobile onto metal draining board to cool. Close Call!! needless to say i didn't use it again.
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Rank: Super forum user
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They must have the relevant CE mark on or they cannot be sold.
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Has been known for CE markings to be forged. For a litle "light" reading loook up the RAPEX reports on product recalls - just google it
The report for 2010 has just been published and makes for interesting reading
Phil
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many thanks. i have made our staff in our NHS trust aware.
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Is that the Chinese Export CE mark or the EU CE mark?...
It is common in the electrical industry for CE marks and other approvals to be forged on imported equipment and it has been regularly reported in the electrical industry press.
The last time I mentioned where such things come from and the attitude of the supplying country in my experience, the moderators removed my post, so I can't suggest which country the majority of these devices may originate from.
I do believe that you can guess, or at least find it from reliable Internet sources in the electrical trace press with a simple search.
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It is quite common for a product to be CE stamped but not comply with same. However, the list for which CE is required does not include battery chargers, except for electromagnetic compatibility (which they usually fail anyway): Active implantable medical devices Appliances burning gaseous fuels Cableway installations designed to carry persons Eco-design of energy related products Electromagnetic compatibility Equipment and protective systems intended for use potentially explosive atmospheres Explosives for civil uses Hot-water boilers In vitro diagnostic medical devices Lifts Low voltage Machinery Measuring Instruments Medical devices Noise emission in the environment Non-automatic weighing instruments Personal protective equipment Pressure equipment Pyrotechnics Radio and telecommunications terminal equipment Recreational craft Safety of toys Simple pressure vessels
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And many of the "failed" chargers will have been made by the same manufacturer that makes "passed" products.
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The list for CE marking includes 'low voltage'. These are the regulations that require the battery charger to be CE marked.
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Please let's not get bogged down with the Chinese Export nonsense again. It doesn't mean anything, it's just an excuse for the remote possibility that anyone checks on the documentation. As has been discussed here previously, virtually all CE marks even from genuine big name companies do not comply with the sizing requirements and the cheap imports just print it on like they apply all of the other approvals markings.
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Rank: Super forum user
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John, As you said in your post the low voltage directive requires CE marking thus chargers must be CE marked. As per the post by Jane above.
Simon, I can't comment further on anything to do with Chinese Exports over and above the comments I have already made, else I am afraid that I will be moderated again.
Suffice to say, I am NOT on about the actual detail of the mark itself, as I have suggested research the issues that the electrical manufacturing industry has there are many reliable sources out there to back this up.
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Since they are high voltage on the input.......and many are switched-mode....and can easily, given a fault condition, be high voltage on the output....
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Rank: Super forum user
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John, Sorry but there is an error in your last post above, they are not high voltage at all they are low voltage, this is why they come under the low voltage directive.
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