close
close

Sharkninja remembers more than 1.8 million pressure heads due to combustion injury reports

Over a million speed cookers made by Sharkninja are called back after the customers were submitted in incineration injury reports.

The consumer product security commission and Sharkninja issued a callback for the multifunctional pressure cookers from the Sharkninja Foodi OP300 series brand on Thursday after 106 reports of combustion injuries that were triggered over two dozen lawsuits against the company.

The pressure cooker is black with a capacity of 6.5 liters. The affected models include those with the model numbers OP300, OP301, OP302, OP302, OP302HCN, OP302HAQ, OP302HW, OP305, OP305, OP350CO, which are printed on the side of the cooking dishes.

“An additional code that follows the model number is not part of this model name. For example, a unit with the name” OP301 i07 “is a model op301 unit. All replacement -speed -quick chocolate of the OP300 series are also included in this recall,” said the CPSC report.

Around 1,846,400 pressure connoisseurs were called back in Canada and another 184,240 were sold.

The printers sold for around 200 US dollars (Commission for Consumer Products)

The cookware was sold from January 2019 to March 2025 in Walmart, Costco, Sam's Club, Amazon and Target shops nationwide and online at www.ninjakitchen.com. Each pressure cooker sold for around 200 US dollars.

According to the CPSC report, there were more than 50 reports on burns of second or third degree for the face or body in the 106 reports on incineration injuries.

Customers who have the pressure cooker are asked to use the product function of the product immediately and contact Sharkninja for a free replacement lid.

The report, however, states that customers can continue to use the other functions of the printers, including air roasts.

The recall comes a little more than a week after the Upper Crust Bakery LP published a voluntary recall of three of his bread products after glass fragments had been discovered on the surface of the bread.

The recall affects 89 cases of old grains of Hoagie Rolls, 699 cases of Multigrain -Sauerteig and 30 cases of whole grain -Multigrin bread. All products were frozen and sold in corrugated cardboard boxes.

Consumers who bought these articles are asked not to consume them and to return them to their place of purchase for a refund.

The bread breads were sold in the shops in six states: California, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

On April 25, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) classified it as a recall of class II, which means that “a situation or exposure to a violation of a violation of a violation of a violation can cause or medically reversible adverse health consequences or in which the likelihood of serious adverse health consequences is far away.”

However, there were no reports on injuries due to the returned bread at the time of writing.

Leave a Comment