Go Back   oOple.com Forums > General > General Race Chat

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 17-04-2011
Chequered Flag Racing's Avatar
Chequered Flag Racing Chequered Flag Racing is offline
Spends too long on oOple ...
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: In Early Retirment
Posts: 5,991
Exclamation LiPo Batteries / £540 for damages

thread on racechat re the BRCA F1, GT10 summer series and batteries for the series

Quote:
Lets talk cells....
Ok, so getting ready for the first meeting i have realised that my supper special £20 ebay Lipos are not on the list in the EB section.

Do i really have to go out and buy new cells just to take part in this event? I am competing in the GP2 class which is billed as being budget, but i can tell you if i have to get new cells for the event this will no longer be a budget event for me

my current packs are these http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Turnigy-5000mA...item5643984362

Can i race them? As far as i can see they offer no advantage, infact they push me 111grams OVERWEIGHT
The following is currently posted on racechat by the 12th section Qualifying Officer, Gareth Bevens in the same thread

Quote:
Hi All,

Having seen the nature of this thread, I thought it would be a good location to share a little bit of info about a recent insurance claim...

A young racer recently bought some LiPo batteries from an online retailer selling through E-Bay, the battery arrived without incident and was taken, still sealed in its packet to said racers local club. The LiPo was opened at the club and immediately burst into flames (as I understand it, it was due to sub-standard wiring shorting the cell out), the racer made for the nearest door with the now alight battery, which consequently got dropped on the entrance hall carpet (which was only a couple of weeks old and had the school logo in it (the club uses the school to race at btw)).

Needless to say, a hole was burnt in the carpet, and the school presented an invoice to the club for the replacement of the carpet, the club in turn claimed on the BRCA insurance. When the insurance company investigated the claim and asked the question ‘Who is the importer of the batteries?’.

These cells had been bought from a supplier in China (I believe this was done in innocence) and had no CE marking or tractability, so the racer is now classed as the importer and found himself presented with a bill for £540 for damages to the School carpet from the insurance company....

I’m not trying to scare anyone off buying cells from E-Bay, all I am saying is be careful. The link above looks ok to me (with my limited knowledge) but it’s always worth checking what you’re buying and making sure the distributer has suitable credentials & insurance. Please note:- by stating it looks ok to me, I'm not accepting any responsibility for these cells

I’m going to let Jim know I’ve posted this and am happy for it to be updated if any of the info is inaccurate, but this is certainly my understanding of the discussions I’ve been privy to.
__________________
o0ple Trader Feedback
NE Venue's New & Old
my space on YouTube
CFR RCTV Channel
Glenn Atterton

BRCA 2005 1/10th Off-Road Veterans Champion
LMP12 National Champion 2003/2004 / F3 class
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 17-04-2011
Gazza's Avatar
Gazza Gazza is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 160
Default

Its hard to say if this is true or not But it came all the way from China in a sealed container and only burst into flames at the track . . . . how conveiant ?

I like most people have seen loads of videos on you tube where there blown up on purpose and it takes some doing the only way they burst into flames is the GAS and it has to be punchared first you may well have seen a puffed Cell in a hard case . . . that tells you you did some thing wrong some where

BUT NO the BRCA want it in a LiPo sack / bag where you cant see it puffing up. . . really stupid idea IMHO

The "and had no CE marking or tractability, so the racer is now classed as the importer and found himself presented with a bill for £540 for damages to the School carpet from the insurance company...."

I thought they said it caught on fire of cause it wont have an CE mark its burnt off


I fly model planes like a few others. We charge at 1C and use the soft cell ones and to see planes crash from 500ft and then you go and get the bits the lipo DOES not burst into flames bent / warped may be but never on fire . . . YET

So is the post Genuine . . . you tell me
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 17-04-2011
superdez superdez is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 174
Default

If cells were imported from China, and there was no distributor within the U.K/E.U. then technically the person who imports the cells become the first distributor within the E.U.

The general product safety regulations covers this area of safety law, however it would seem that the the regulations covers a product that has been placed on the market within the E.U. As the cells were not placed on the market then I believe that the insurance company should not have treated the purchaser as an importer and attached liability to the purchaser.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 17-04-2011
Gazza's Avatar
Gazza Gazza is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 160
Default

surley to be a distributor you must buy / import and then sell on yes. . . .
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 17-04-2011
DCM's Avatar
DCM DCM is offline
Spends too long on oOple ...
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Marvelous South Wales!!
Posts: 8,896
Default

The cynical inside me tells me that there is more going on than reported. Cells won't just 'burst into flames' on opening the packet, as the packet would of been swollen at least upon receipt.

As for the insurance, looking at a way of scape goating a payout?
__________________
dragon paints : team tekin : fusion hobbies :SCHUMACHER RACING : Nuclear R/C for all my sticky and slippery stuff - if it needs gluing or lubing, Nuclear RC is the man!
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 17-04-2011
liam's Avatar
liam liam is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: newport
Posts: 293
Default

Sounds like a pile of balls to me.

If somethings on fire the last thing your gonna do is pick it up!

You would end up with the skin melted off your hand possable losing all the feeling in your hand altogether!

Id make a counter claim saying that the club was was negligent in not enforcing/ fully notifing the "rules".


Id tell them to prove there claim in a court of law....should test the waters abit....talking of waters....does sound a little bit fishy this random exploding bit.

No doubt there all made in the same factory like your m&s V's asda ready meals!
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 17-04-2011
SlowOne SlowOne is offline
Mad Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,549
Default

I'm afraid this is poor example of pulling something from somewhere else, out of context, and it then getting out of hand. For the record...

It is true. The point is not that this can happen but that if you import something from someone who is not the official importer, distributor or retailer inside the EU, then you are liable. Insurance companies will take the liability to the official importers, distributors, etc. in order to pay the claim. If you bought the product outside the official importer, distributor, etc., then you are the importer, and you will be asked by the insurance company to settle the claim. It is then up to you to sue whoever you want to sue in order to get your money back. If you can afford the time and money...

This is not about the quality of the product, how the accident happened, or the rights and wrongs of what the Club did or did not do. It is a piece of information about what can now happen if you import something outside an official EU distribution network.

This is not a matter for debate. It will make no difference whatsoever what your opinion, or the opinion of your mate down the pub is, this is English Law. If you want to change the interpretation of the Law through a Judge's Precedent, then go right ahead.

In this case, the Club claimed against the BRCA Insurance, the Insurer asked who the importer was in order to claim against them, and when it was revealed that the person had bought them from the Far East, and not an EU official importer, distributor, etc. the insurance company put the claim on the individual as the importer.

Go ahead; whinge, bitch, come up with all the usual alternatives, quote anyone, but this is a fact, it is true, and it is being put out as a guide to all RC drivers of the possible risks. When you import outside the official network of a product's distributors, this is a potential risk. It is up to you whether you take that risk or not.

It would have been better if the person who started this thread had spent some time researching the source, and stating exactly the context in which it was posted. I hope this makes that context clear, and that with this information you will make your own decisions about where you buy things. HTH
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 17-04-2011
MRD's Avatar
MRD MRD is offline
Mad Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Cleckhuddersfax
Posts: 882
Default

What would happen if you bought LRP lipo's from HK? Theyre on the list and I can't see where it say they have to be bought in the UK. Would I be classed as the importer even tho LRP say I'm not?

I can see the point of safe lipos but it does seem like scare tactics.
__________________
Mark Dyson

Clown
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 17-04-2011
liam's Avatar
liam liam is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: newport
Posts: 293
Default

No offence Slowone but until you can show me which law makes me the lawful importer and person held legally responsable in a case like this then Im open minded on the subject.

Seems odd that its always Non EU lipo's that seem to explode into flames and not the more expensive and "better" EU sourced ones.

Hopefully Im wrong but this smells of disinformation.
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 17-04-2011
SlowOne SlowOne is offline
Mad Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,549
Default

It is not up to me to prove anything. This is a real case, and it really happened, and the person who thought they could claim through BRCA insurance is now paying the claim themselves. There will be an official write up on the BRCA site of this soon, but we were asked to help get the information out there. The point remains that it isn't the product we are talking about here, it is the status of the person deemed liable as the importer. If you want to ignore it as "disinformation" then go right ahead, no skin off my nose - you seem to know best.

Update - I did some digging. Under REACH regulations (use of chemicals) the person or legal entity doing the importing is liable for the legal ramifications - we are hardly that but it is a precedent. Under HMRC Rules, the person or entity paying for the products in another country is responsible for ensuring that the goods are legal to import, and that person or entity is responsible for paying all taxes and duties - if you buy your LRP bit from Hong Kong, you don't ask LRP to pay the taxes and duties, do you?!!. In HMRC's eyes, if you buy from outside the EU, you are the importer, and you are liable for the charges and complying with the Law on what can or cannot be imported. I can easily see that if this is how the Revenue see it, then it is how others can see it. Again, I am not as certain this is right as Liam is that it is wrong, but if you are looking for precedent...

Just for clarity, I understand that the reason for the failure was not product related, it was related to the way it was packed and how it was removed from the packet. I don't know this for sure, so we will have to wait for the BRCA note to know that for sure. Again, I say, the issue being brought to our attention is not the safety of the product, it is the status of the person deemed the importer.

If you buy LRP from Hong Kong, and the insurer asks LRP to pay, they will show from records that they did not supply the item through their official EU distributor network. What happens next is not covered by this example. However, since most EU distributors will not honour warranty on RC gear (KO, Sanwa, etc.) or most anything else if you buy from Hong Kong, that situation doesn't start well!

I will ask the BRCA if they can clarify that situation in their note.
Reply With Quote
  #11  
Old 17-04-2011
mattybucks mattybucks is offline
Mad Member
 
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 1,800
Default

Well i'm not to sure about this one. I'd have to see that letter of claim, and allegations, and a copy of the file to be able to give a correct answer.

The school insurer would contact the club/hirer in the first instance. There must be a hire agreement, and the damage will be covered by the terms of that.

The circumstances of cells going up seem a little strange, brand new cells being opened up, bursting into flames? I would have to question this. Do the cells come charged? We're they in the process of being charged and has the user charged them as per the manufacturers instructions? Has the person been negligent in any way regarding the handling of the cells? If he has then that would be the cell company out of the claim anyway.

Does the club operate as per the BRCA rules re charging in a lipo sack? If so was this clearly displayed? Has the club been negligent by not enforcing the charging of lipos in sacks?

If someone was not using a set of BRCA legal cells the i'm pretty sure the BRCA could say to a member not our problem.

There are so many questions that need to be answered before anyone could possibly come to a liability decision.
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old 17-04-2011
liam's Avatar
liam liam is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: newport
Posts: 293
Default

Well mate its just my Da was a cop for 30 years and he taught me that when anyone says ..."its the law"...even cops...ask them to prove it.

The main point for me is that someone could have been hurt really bad...I dont care about the money..id get them to take me to court then agree to pay the amount back monthly fo "X" amount of time.

Whoever is running a club, is quite likely responsable to ensure the right H&S equipment is on site because if its not them the brown stuff can really hit the fan.

Checking 1st aid boxes should be a weekly job

The BRCA is probably duty bound to ensure 1st aiders/equipment and fire fighting tools are available at an incident.

I dont know much about this from a BRCA perspective and I hope procedures are in place from them that covers this?
Reply With Quote
  #13  
Old 17-04-2011
baD's Avatar
baD baD is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Co Durham
Posts: 375
Send a message via MSN to baD Send a message via Skype™ to baD
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by SlowOne View Post
I'm afraid this is poor example of pulling something from somewhere else, out of context, and it then getting out of hand. For the record...

..............about what can now happen if you import something outside an official EU distribution network.

This is not a matter for debate. It will make no difference whatsoever what your opinion, or the opinion of your mate down the pub is, this is English Law. If you want to change the interpretation of the Law through a Judge's Precedent, then go right ahead.

In this case, the Club claimed against the BRCA Insurance, the Insurer asked who the importer was in order to claim against them, and when it was revealed that the person had bought them from the Far East, and not an EU official importer, distributor, etc. the insurance company put the claim on the individual as the importer.

Go ahead; ...........
If I read this correctly then this is a huge issue re an individuals BRCA licence.
As the claim seems to have gone through the Clubs insurance, I could assume the individual concerned, was a guest without a licence/insurance. Either way, he either has his own liability insurance or he benefits as a guest. So....... in reality, a licence holders' belief that he is insured against damage he causes through his own negligence is totally false in this case.
Say I buy LiPo's and cannot remember or evidence the source (quite likely in my case), they could be third hand. Knowing insurance co standard approach (19.5 years exp in EL/PL contracts) I now know it is extremely probable that they would take the same view as above and hold me liable as there is no one else from whom to recoup their outlay.
Does anyone else believe all BRCA members should be made aware of this immediately and moves should started to press for an alternative underwriter?
__________________
Mini Mardave ; 2 x HPI Pro 3 ; Lazer ZX-5 & ZX-5 FS2 ; AE B4, all handicapped by me
Sponsored by The Cosmetic House
Reply With Quote
  #14  
Old 17-04-2011
SlowOne SlowOne is offline
Mad Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,549
Default

Laim, see my update above - it's as close as I can get to a legal precedent to answer your question. It is a good point to substantiate what happened - in the eyes of the Revenue, you are liable for all taxes and duties, so you are the importer.

I'm with your Dad. My godfather was the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate of London, and he would say the same thing! He was also a pretty handy amateur boxer so it didn't pay to argue with my Uncle Dai!

My understanding is that the person with the LiPo pack managed to short out the exposed connectors as the LiPo was being taken out of the packet, and once shorted they welded together and the LiPo went up. As the first post says, the LiPo was being rushed to an exit, but was dropped on the mat with the school logo on.

The school claimed on the Club, the Club claimed on their BRCA insurance, the BRCA insurer claimed on the importer, who turned out to be...

The rest of your post above doesn't quite conform to your Dad's, or my Uncle Dai's good advice does it? "Quite likely..." "should be..." "probably..." "I don't know much...". Would it be too much to ask for you to retract that post until you have some form of evidence as to what is required or at least, as in my case, some form of research that might lead us to think there was something concrete there? Just a thought...
Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old 17-04-2011
mattybucks mattybucks is offline
Mad Member
 
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 1,800
Default

One question - whats the BRCA rules re the use of TX lipo's?
Reply With Quote
  #16  
Old 17-04-2011
SlowOne SlowOne is offline
Mad Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,549
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by baD View Post
Does anyone else believe all BRCA members should be made aware of this immediately and moves should started to press for an alternative underwriter?
Er.... which bit of this post making people aware is not doing that?

BRCA insurance is not about you being insulated from your negligence, it is about you be insured against accidents. This whole area is a minefield, and anyone who thinks it can be simplistically summed up like this is not living in 2011.

If you have a query about BRCA insurance, and want your question answered, please e-mail [email protected] with the post above. Only Jim Spencer can answer that for you. No one else can. If you could post his response, I am sure that we'd all like to know the answer.

That's all the fielding of questions I can do tonight, I'll leave you all to speculate that the world will end at midnight because someone bought a LiPo pack from the Far East!! Sleep well...
Reply With Quote
  #17  
Old 17-04-2011
Gazza's Avatar
Gazza Gazza is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 160
Default

CE marking

Just checked all my so called BRCA approved cells 1s & 2s and I cant find any CE mark on any of them ?

Smc 4900

Team Powers 6000

Ip intelect 5000

What should we be looking for . . . although one does say
Made in china
Reply With Quote
  #18  
Old 17-04-2011
liam's Avatar
liam liam is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: newport
Posts: 293
Default

Quote...."The rest of your post above doesn't quite conform to your Dad's, or my Uncle Dai's good advice does it? "Quite likely..." "should be..." "probably..." "I don't know much..."....


Mate just didnt want to make any firm statements without having any evidence and dont want to use cloak and dagger wording.


Peoples safety above cash for me always because £540 is pennys...people shouldnt be picking up anything thats on fire and someone trained needs to be there.

PS Im not a person/legal enitity im a human being
Reply With Quote
  #19  
Old 17-04-2011
baD's Avatar
baD baD is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Co Durham
Posts: 375
Send a message via MSN to baD Send a message via Skype™ to baD
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by SlowOne View Post
Er.... which bit of this post making people aware is not doing that?

BRCA insurance is not about you being insulated from your negligence, it is about you be insured against accidents. This whole area is a minefield, and anyone who thinks it can be simplistically summed up like this is not living in 2011.

If you have a query about BRCA insurance, and want your question answered, please e-mail [email protected] with the post above. Only Jim Spencer can answer that for you. No one else can. If you could post his response, I am sure that we'd all like to know the answer.

That's all the fielding of questions I can do tonight, I'll leave you all to speculate that the world will end at midnight because someone bought a LiPo pack from the Far East!! Sleep well...
Not totally sure what is meant by your first line in the quote above - but if it is meant to read that WE, members ARE being made aware, I beg to differ. Had I not stumbled on this thread I for one would be blissfully unaware, as no doubt are hundreds of other as I type.
Perhaps this incident is so recent that no action has yet been taken - hopefully it will.

Re your second paragraph - I believe you are way off there.
Public Liability insurance is just that - they take your premium and in return take the financial loss from you should a fortuitous incident causing financial loss occur through your actions or inaction. The action or inaction itself is the negligence, so in a way we all pay our premium to be financially insulated from our negligence.
__________________
Mini Mardave ; 2 x HPI Pro 3 ; Lazer ZX-5 & ZX-5 FS2 ; AE B4, all handicapped by me
Sponsored by The Cosmetic House
Reply With Quote
  #20  
Old 17-04-2011
Chrislong's Avatar
Chrislong Chrislong is offline
*SuPeRsTaR mEmBeR*
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Bury
Posts: 4,196
Default

Say im using Trakpower sourced from UK (which I am still), what would happen if these burst into flames considering the importer may no longer be available - closed? (have they closed as Flightpower? I don't know).

Also, say somebody buys LRP cells from UK store, but also buys additional LRP cells from far east. Can't identify which pack is which, but one goes up in flames and causes damaged... would this be importer? What if owner claimed "Oh I bought these from XYZ modelshop in UK" without mentioning the other pack he bought from far east? Im assuming nobody would question it, no way of telling.

People should take note of this thread, true or not, just keep it in mind! Its good this is being shared with us. Thanks.
__________________
JESpares JESpares JESpares JESpares JESpares
www.jespares.com
Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 05:55 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
oOple.com