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Transportation United States

Lime Recalls 2,000 Scooters After Reports of Some Catching Fire (businessinsider.com) 49

Lime has recalled 2,000 of its electric scooters from the streets of Los Angeles, San Diego, and Lake Tahoe, the company said Wednesday, after the Washington Post contacted it about some catching on fire. From a report: In a statement, Lime said it was investigating the "unconfirmed" reported and had pulled the vulnerable models, manufactured by the Chinese company Segway Ninebot, from circulation. "At no time were riders or members of the public put at risk," Lime said. "Unfortunately, despite our efforts, we've recently received an unconfirmed report that another Segway Ninebot scooter model may also be vulnerable to battery failure, which we are currently investigating." Until the problem is solved, scooters will only be charged in Lime facilities and not available to "juicers," people who are paid by the company charge scooters after-hours. These facilities will be monitored 24/7, the company said, and all scooters in Lime's fleet, regardless of manufacturer, will undergo a "new daily diagnostic training program."
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Lime Recalls 2,000 Scooters After Reports of Some Catching Fire

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  • Would be great if they all caught fire.....

    • Halt and catch fire?
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 )

      Why?
      Do you just like seeing people seriously hurt in general? Or do you just don't like the idea of motorized transportation that isn't a full sized car or motorcycle. Because there was someone who slightly inconvenienced you with some unsafe driving.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Sir Holo ( 531007 )

        Why?
        Do you just like seeing people seriously hurt in general? Or do you just don't like the idea of motorized transportation that isn't a full sized car or motorcycle. Because there was someone who slightly inconvenienced you with some unsafe driving.

        Because most people riding these are under-aged, and blast down the sidewalk at top speed. Broken wrists and legs result.

      • Re:Catch Fire (Score:4, Insightful)

        by ArgonautThief ( 2611499 ) on Wednesday October 31, 2018 @04:18PM (#57570455)

        Because they are motorised vehicles that interact in public spaces with other vehicles and pedestrians but there is no requirement to have a licence to operate them, any test that proves aptitude, responsibility, any form of consideration for other members of the public or decency on the part of the user in any way whatsoever.

        Slight inconvenience, no problem, that's ok, who cares?

        Reckless foolishness that forces drivers / pedestrians to take evasive manoeuvres? That's an issue. People with drivers' licences already do foolish, dangerous things. No need to add even more potential for accidents to the mix.

        I obviously wouldn't want them to catch fire and injure the rider and / or bystanders. Maybe just all quietly burn to ashes in a warehouse somewhere.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Just how fast do these things go? Google says 15mph top possible speed. You can pedal a bike more than 15mph without a motor (and much quicker down an incline), so unless you think bikes ought to have similar requirements, it seems kinda ridiculous to regulate these like actual motorcycles and cars. You know what bicyclists can also do? Get tickets for biking in a reckless manner. Unless there's some odd legal loophole where they can't ticket these scooter users in a similar manner, enforcement is what's ne
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by rockmuelle ( 575982 )

        Because they are not safe and the companies are exploiting gaps in laws and enforcement to profit at their customer's expense.

        I've been a bike commuter for 20+ years and am well aware of the hazards of the roads and how to bike in a city safely and lawfully. The vast majority of scooter riders are not being safe and are breaking laws on a regular basis.

        Some examples (Austin as my reference point):

        - Scooter users regularly dart through intersections when lights are red, often executing dangerous left turns.

  • Catching? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday October 31, 2018 @03:33PM (#57570091)

    I wonder if they are catching on fire, or some are being set on fire...

    I know some people dislike Lime scooters quite a lot, I've heard of some found with wires cut or otherwise mangled.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      That shouldn't be hard to figure out by an examination of the remains.

      It should be extremely difficult to get one of these things to burn, and the effort required will leave traces. If it's easy to set one on fire, that'd be a design flaw in itself.

      • Are you stupid? The vertical portion is a column filled with Lithium-based batteries. It would be trivial to cause them to explode. Oh, sorry, I mean "experience thermal runaway, with ejecta and flaming report".

        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          Are you stupid? The vertical portion is a column filled with Lithium-based batteries. It would be trivial to cause them to explode. Oh, sorry, I mean "experience thermal runaway, with ejecta and flaming report".

          So you don't carry a mobile phone because of the danger of thermal runaway, right?

          I may be stupid, but I do know enough about battery technology to know that even though the underlying lithion chemistry is unstable, it's not trivial to get an assembled li-battery to explode by thermal runaway. In fact it's hard to get them to explode by an external heat source, unless it's something like a gas torch, in which case you'll get a localized explosion of a single cell.

  • by cunina ( 986893 ) on Wednesday October 31, 2018 @03:50PM (#57570239)
    And not just due to fire hazards. I've actually owned one for a couple of years, and I've had a number of close calls. They are absolutely a hazard to ride on the sidewalks, and American-style bike-unfriendly roads are no place for them either.
  • man, this new Ghostrider reboot is LAME
  • Crappy Lipo batteries or crappy chargers puffing up the crappy lipo batteries. Run into that all the time with radio control models using lipo batteries.
  • It's a feature, not a bug.

    Next up, a fiery twist of lime.

  • Was it raining? Lime can real hot when wet, hot enough to start a fire.

    Although quicklime is not considered a fire hazard, its reaction with water can release enough heat to ignite combustible materials.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

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