Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
The Quality Gap
Behind the Battery Report
Design to Reality
Building for the Brain: Pioneering a Long-Term Neural Implant
Materials World
Comparing Wine Corks: Natural, Technical, and Synthetic
From The Floor
Finding Lead in Stanley's Quencher
Materials World
From Rust to Silicon: A Week of Storage Media
Design to Reality
Heinz’s Sustainable Ketchup Cap
Design to Reality
How Does a Car Cigarette Lighter Work?
The Quality Gap
How People Drive Quality
Materials World
Speaking in Steel and Sapphire: MING’s 20.01 Series 5
From The Floor
The Secret to Better Running Shoes? CT Scanning
The Quality Gap
What Went Wrong Inside These Recalled Power Banks?
The Quality Gap
What’s Inside Your Water Filter? A CT Scan Comparison
Materials World
What’s Inside a Battery?

Zyntony Recalls Kogalla Power Banks Due to Fire and Burn Hazards; Sold on Kogalla.com

Notice Date:
10.2.2025
Category
Battery or Energy Storage Defects
Manufacturer:
Source:
CPSC
This recall involves Kogalla-branded power banks, models BP125, BatPak 2F and BatPak 3F. The recalled rechargeable USB power banks have 6,700mAh, 13,400mAh or 20,100mAh lithium-ion batteries and were sold separately and included with Kogalla trail lights. The Kogalla logo is printed on the front of the power banks. The model number appears on the back of the power banks. Power banks model BP125 have a black USB-A jack and models BatPak 2F and 3F have orange USB-A jacks. Note: Do not throw this recalled lithium-ion battery or device in the trash, the general recycling stream (e.g., street-level or curbside recycling bins), or used battery recycling boxes found at various retail and home improvement stores. Recalled lithium-ion batteries must be disposed of differently than other batteries, because they present a greater risk of fire. Your municipal household hazardous waste (HHW) collection center may accept this recalled lithium-ion battery or device for disposal. Before taking your battery or device to a HHW collection center, contact them ahead of time and ask whether it accepts recalled lithium-ion batteries. If they don’t, contact your municipality for further guidance.