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Samsung tells Korean customers to stop using Galaxy Note 7

kids
Community Champion (Retired)
Community Champion (Retired)

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Samsung Electronics on Saturday recommended South Korean customers to stop using the new Galaxy Note 7 smartphones, which the company is recalling worldwide after several dozen of them caught fire.

 

In a statement posted on its website, the South Korean technology giant advised local users to visit the company’s service centers to receive rental phones for temporary use. Samsung plans to provide Galaxy Note 7 devices with new batteries in South Korea starting on Sept. 19.

 

“We again express our sincere apologies to our customers who value our products,” the company said in a statement.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration on Thursday warned airline passengers not to turn on or charge Galaxy Note 7s during flights and also not to put the smartphone in their checked bags.

 

Samsung last week announced plans to recall 2.5 million Galaxy Note 7 phones worldwide after its investigation of the device fires found rechargeable lithium batteries manufactured by one of its suppliers at fault.

 

The company has confirmed 35 cases of its devices catching fire, most of them occurring while the battery was being charged. Samsung released the jumbo smartphone on Aug. 19.

 

Source. AP

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kids
Community Champion (Retired)
Community Champion (Retired)

Press Update 19.09.2016

 

Samsung Thailand have announced that all Galaxy Note 7 smartphones that were part of a first batch have been sent back to Korea.

The devices were a pre-booking order for customers who had reserved in advance.

 

All IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity) numbers could be verified with the company.

 

They further announced that subsequent orders that the company is racing to produce would be all new devices without the problems associated with those that have been recalled.

A worldwide recall of the devices was announced last week after dozens of cases of exploding batteries causing fire were reported.

 

Meanwhile, Samsung said Monday it is investigating reports that two Galaxy Note 7 smartphones caught fire in China, where the company previously said all phones for sale were safe and didn’t need to be included in a global recall.

 

If confirmed, the reports would deepen Samsung Electronics’s growing woes with the problem-plagued smartphones. It has already faced criticism that its recall policies have been confusing for consumers and left them uncertain about whether they should continue using their phones.

 

Samsung said it is investigating both reported cases in China, the world’s largest smartphone market.

 

A Chinese social media user posted messages on Sunday saying a friend’s Galaxy Note 7 caught fire over the weekend, and included photos of the damaged phone.

 

The user, contacted by phone, told The Associated Press the Note 7 was bought Sept. 1 through the JD.com e-commerce site. The man, who asked not to be identified by name, said the phone started to heat up and vibrate late Saturday night, then exploded and emitted black smoke.

 

A second report on a separate social media account said an owner’s phone exploded Sunday while the person was playing a game on it. That account gave no contact information for the user or details of where the person lives, but also showed photos of the damaged phone and its serial number.

Samsung Electronics launched the Note 7 phone in China on Sept. 1 amid a growing number of reports of the phones catching fire in other nations.

 

The following day, Samsung announced it would stop sales and recall 2.5 million Note 7 phones in 10 countries, but not in China.

Koh Dong-jin, Samsung’s mobile president, said at the time that sales in China would continue because Note 7 phones sold there used a different battery than those linked to problems elsewhere. Analysts believe Samsung SDI supplied most of the Galaxy Note 7s with faulty batteries, while Note 7 phones in China use batteries made by Amperex Technology Ltd., a Chinese manufacturer that reportedly is also a main supplier of batteries for Apple’s iPhone.

 

Last week, Samsung belatedly recalled 1,858 Note 7 phones in China from a different batch that had been distributed before general sales began. The company said the two reports of fires were not from that batch.

 

In announcing its global recall on Sept. 2, Samsung did not initially say whether consumers could continue to use the Note 7 phones without danger. Then a few days later it urged them to immediately turn off the phones. And last week, Samsung said it is rolling out a software update to the Note 7 phones that will limit the battery charge to 60 percent, but it didn’t say whether all phones would automatically receive it.

 

This week, the company began shipping new Note 7 phones to replace the defective ones. In South Korea, mobile carriers said Note 7 owners can begin exchanging their phones starting Monday, but there were few people doing so at a Samsung service center. South Korea’s government has not issued an official recall like its counterparts in the U.S. and Canada, and for consumers in South Korea to get a full refund for the Note 7, Monday is the deadline.

 

Source: Associated Press Bejing.

kids
Community Champion (Retired)
Community Champion (Retired)

To update this thread: It looks as though the supply problem is going to take longer than thought. Thailand is usually one of the first markets to have new Samsung devices but this report seems to indicate it may be a long haul.

 

Samsung (Thailand) have announced that their revise lot of Galaxy Note 7 phones will be delivered to pre-order customers by the end of November.

In addition to previously announced promotions customers will receive Samsung Level Active headphones with a value of 2,990 baht  (edit £60) for free.

For other customers the devices are expected to be on the open market by the new year.

Customers who wish to cancel their order should do so by October 10th by going to the shop where they ordered it and receiving their deposit back.

A 2,000 (edit £40) baht voucher will also be offered.

 

Source: ThaiRath

kids
Community Champion (Retired)
Community Champion (Retired)

@drey_p wrote:

I am having to resist the urge to say "I told you so" LOL


Go on be a devil!  :smileylol: