The transceiver can switch modes unexpectedly when not locked or installed in the harness. When this occurs, it will prevent the transceiver from transmitting a signal and can make it difficult to locate a skier in an avalanche, which can result in severe bodily harm or death.
The lithium ion battery in the hotspots can overheat, posing fire and burn hazards.
These products contain the substance methyl salicylate, which must be in child resistant packaging, as required by the Poison Prevention Packaging Act (PPPA). The packaging of the products is not child resistant, posing a risk of poisoning if the contents are swallowed by young children.
The spray gun connector can break, causing the hose and/or parts of the connector to become dislodged during use, posing an impact injury hazard to the user.
The pins inside the connector on the power cord can deform and overheat, posing a fire hazard.
The recalled bath wraps fail to meet flammability standards for children's sleepwear, posing a risk of burn injuries to children.
The tempered glass bowl can break or shatter during use, posing a laceration hazard.
The bath seats fail to meet the federal safety standard for infant bath seats, including requirements for stability, and can tip over while in use, posing a drowning hazard to babies.
The products contain the substance methyl salicylate, which must be in child resistant packaging as required by the Poison Prevention Packaging Act (PPPA). The packaging of the products is not child resistant, posing a risk of poisoning if the contents are applied to the skin or swallowed by young children.
The pool pump motors can overheat, posing a fire hazard.
The drive belt can break during operation and damage the inner clutch cover assembly and fuel line, which can result in a fuel leak, posing a fire hazard.
The drive chain can break, posing a crash hazard and/or property damage.
The propane cylinders manufactured with a handle below the weld on the side could leak propane gas, posing a fire hazard.
The device user can be unable to lower the climber, posing a risk of injury to the climber.
An incorrect engine ignition coil and flywheel can lead to hard starting and engine kick back, posing an injury hazard to the operator.
The sprayer's lithium-ion battery can overheat, posing a fire hazard.
The metal wire in the shepherd's staff can become exposed, posing a laceration hazard.
The bottles containing the prescription drug can leak due to a fit issue between the press-in bottle adapter and bottleneck. If the bottle is leaking, there is a risk of drug exposure by contact with skin or eyes. Prescription drugs must be in child resistant packaging that prevents children from gaining access to the contents as required by the Poison Prevention Packaging Act (PPPA).
The HR platform frame can collapse, posing a crush hazard that can result in severe injury or death.
The mattresses fail to meet the mandatory federal flammability standard for mattresses, posing a fire hazard.
The candles' high flames can ignite the surface of the wax, posing fire and burn hazards.
Water can get into the battery causing a short circuit, posing a crash hazard.
The brace arms can fail to lock the table legs into place and the table can collapse, posing an injury risk to consumers.
The stool seat can break off the base, posing a fall hazard.
The throttle pedal can return to the idle position more slowly than anticipated once the pedal is released or stick in the depressed position, posing a crash hazard.
The screws that hold the bed's mattress foundation to the bed's guardrails can be loose and the mattress foundation can fall, posing a fall risk to children in the bunk bed.
The bicycle's fork steerer tube can break, causing the rider to lose control, fall and suffer injuries.
The products are prescription medications that were labeled and distributed by Dr. Reddy's for institutional use only. The prescription medications were distributed by third party wholesalers to retail pharmacies and could have been dispensed to consumers. The packaging of the products is not child resistant and can pose a risk of poisoning if the contents are swallowed by young children.
The products contain the substance methyl salicylate which must be in child resistant packaging as required by the Poison Prevention Packaging Act (PPPA). The packaging of the products is not child resistant, posing a risk of poisoning if the contents are swallowed by young children.
The chair's back can detach, posing a fall hazard to consumers.
The pull handle on some units can fail to activate the fire alarm system when manually pulled, posing a risk of failure to alert consumers to a fire.
The portable generators have a wiring error which can result in an electrical shock to users.
The candle holders can catch on fire if they come in contact with the candle's flame, posing a fire hazard.
The recalled helmets were incorrectly advertised and marketed for children aged 2 years or older. However, the recalled helmets do not comply with minimum safety requirements for children younger than 5 and pose a risk of head injury to those children.
The convenience charging receptacles and/or USB ports installed in the accent tables can have an electrical issue resulting in reverse polarity, which can pose a shock hazard to the user.
The auger can fail to disengage when the control lever is released, posing an amputation hazard.
The heating element/wiring on the smoker is defective, posing an electric shock hazard to consumers.
The nose piercings and body bars have elevated levels of nickel, posing a risk of skin irritation.
Paint on the red and blue magnet contains levels of lead that exceed the federal lead paint ban. Lead is toxic if ingested by young children and can cause adverse health issues. In addition, the product packaging lacks the required warning labels for magnets and balloons.
Metal screws that attach the PCIe riser assembly to the chassis can cause a short in the printed circuit board and overheating, posing a fire hazard due to the circuit board's design.