Tech giant Apple has instigated a massive international recall of power point adapters for iPads and MacBooks after a small number were found to have broken, causing risk of electric shock.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
It comes only a week after Microsoft recalled 285,000 power cord sets which shipped with its Surface Pro tablet range.
The affected Apple adapters were shipped with MacBooks and iPads between 2003 and 2015, including in Australia and New Zealand. The adapters were also included in the Apple World Travel adapter Kit.
Apple did not say how many consumers the recall affected however based on the company's sales figures it could be in the tens — or even hundreds — of millions. Apple has sold nearly 300 million iPads worldwide since the product was launched in 2010. It has sold 147.7 million computers since 2003; at least 60 million of these were laptops (Apple stopped publishing standalone sales figures for MacBooks in 2013).
The company said it was aware of 12 "incidents" worldwide, however it's not clear whether this involved customers actually suffering electric shocks as a result of the adapters breaking.
The affected adapters attach directly to a power brick to connect devices to the wall, and come with all iPads and MacBooks. New MacBooks also come with adapter on a long cord, which is not affected by this recall.
The recall does not affect smaller 5W USB power adapters – the kind that ship with iPhones.
Not all MacBook and iPad wall adapters are affected either, as Apple began shipping remodelled versions of the adapters at an unknown date.
Some of the redesigned adapters are square in shape, and none of these are affected by the recall. If your adapter is round, as the majority of them are, you can determine whether it's affected by removing it from the power brick and checking the underside.
If there are four or five numbers printed on the inside slot where it connects to the power brick (as in the picture above) — or, conversely, nothing written there at all — you need to take it into an Apple store to be replaced.
If there is a country code written on the underside instead, e.g. AUS or EUR, then this is a newer model and is not affected.
"Because customer safety is the company's top priority, Apple is asking customers to stop using affected plug adapters," the company said in a statement.
The recall also affects adapters sold in Argentina, Brazil, Continental Europe and South Korea. It does not affect products sold in Canada, China, Hong Kong, Japan, the UK or the US.
Apple previously recalled an iPhone power adapter sold in some countries after it was found the prongs could snap off and expose users to risk of electric shock.