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Introduction This section answers the main
background questions about the Product Safety Notice and CD
ROM Safety Advice that we have issued.
We have found that in very rare circumstances, some high
speed CD ROM drives (48X or higher speed) can become dangerous
when used with CD ROM disks with small cracks. The result is
that the disk can be damaged further or shattered and, in very
exceptional circumstances, fragments of the broken disk can be
expelled through the front cover of the drive at high speed.
This could cause serious physical injury. We have confirmed
that the problem can only occur when a damaged CD ROM disk is
used in the CD ROM drive.
This issue may also affect some computers made
by other manufacturers, and if you have concerns we would
advise you to talk to your other suppliers.
We have confirmed that the problem can only occur when a
damaged CD ROM disk is used in the CD ROM drive. You should
immediately advise all users of RM computers with high speed
CD ROM drives that each time they put a CD ROM in the drive
they should check to ensure that the disk does not contain
cracks. They should not use any media that has a crack.
You must ensure that CD ROM disk checking is communicated
to all computer users, and implemented immediately. This is
because it could cause serious injury to continue to use CD
ROM disks with cracks in high speed CD ROM drives.
How long have you known about this? The first
report of a shattered disk escaping from the CD ROM drive of a
PC was made to RM during the summer term 2001. RM recovered
the first such drive from our customer on 11th June 2001 when
it was immediately sent to the manufacturer for laboratory
testing. Further incidents in June and July 2001 indicated
this problem was not a 'one-off' and much work has been done
during June, July and August to understand the nature of the
problem and ascertain the best possible course of action. (We
have seen a total of 73 instances of disks shattering in
drives since June 2000, with 18 instances of egress).
How many cases have you seen? Has anybody been
injured? The problem of CD ROMs
shattering in high speed drives is not new to CD ROM drive
manufacturers. In RM's experience to date, we are aware of
18 cases where parts of a shattered CD ROM have escaped from
the front of the drive, and in none of these cases has anybody
been injured. There have been no instances from drives where
RM shields or firmware updates have been made. RM has taken
action to minimise the possibility that someone
could be injured in the future, RM acted promptly to
ensure the continued safety of our customers, their staff and
students.
Do software companies know about this? What are they
doing? We alerted BESA (the British Education
Suppliers Association) and ESPA (the Education Software
Producers Association) so that they could take appropriate
actions when selecting CD media for duplication. We continue
to
work with CD media manufacturers as part of our ongoing
research, but clearly CDs are produced around the world and so
we suspect many manufacturers of CDs are not aware of the
issue. Additionally we have seen some particularly brittle
CD-R blanks that will of course be used directly by consumers
rather than software companies.
Why haven’t my other suppliers told me? Some
other suppliers to UK education have made announcements
concerning this issue. RM expects
some other computer manufacturers to be affected by disk break
up in high-speed drives given that many computer manufacturers
source and install their CD ROM drives in PCs in the same
standard manner as RM. But RM cannot speak on behalf of those
manufacturers.
I’ve spoken to another supplier and they told me that
there isn’t a problem, or that it’s just an RM
problem? We would strongly advise you to satisfy
yourself in this regard. We believe that we have shipped a
small proportion of the many types of CD ROM drive which we believe
to be affected, and we believe that this issue will clearly
affect other manufacturers who have used any of the affected
drives. We consider it our duty to inform customers that have
purchased RM PCs. RM have used the affected drive in an
entirely standard way and based on this fact we do not expect
it to be purely an RM problem.
Why is RM acting if nobody else has? We do sell
directly and support directly the vast majority of our
customers - this may have enabled us to spot the problem
earlier than other manufacturers.
What is the drive manufacturer doing about it? In
association with CD ROM drive manufacturers we continue to
research into the safety of different CD ROM drives and CD ROM
media.
Why aren’t you advertising this in the national
press? This is not like a consumer product where we
don't know who our customers are. We can identify every
customer that will be affected by this announcement so we are
communicating directly with them all, and with the wider
market place as appropriate eg advisers, DfES.
Why haven’t I seen anything in the press? This is
a rare incident and we believe RM are the first to act.
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