U.S.

Segway Scooter Recall: 220K Units Pose Fall Hazard with 20 Injuries Reported

Segway Scooter Recall: 220K Units Pose Fall Hazard with 20 Injuries Reported
recall
scooters
safety
Key Points
  • 220,000 electric scooters recalled across U.S. retailers
  • 68 confirmed reports of dangerous folding mechanism failures
  • 20 injuries documented including broken bones and lacerations
  • Free repair kits available through manufacturer

The Consumer Product Safety Commission has escalated concerns over Segway's Ninebot Max series following mounting injury reports. Analysis reveals 45% of incidents occurred during acceleration phases when riders least expect handlebar collapses.

Industry experts note this marks the third major e-scooter recall since 2022, highlighting systemic quality control issues in micro-mobility manufacturing. A recent Chicago case study showed 8 hospitalizations from similar folding mechanism failures across competing brands.

Segway's engineering team identified metal fatigue in latch components as the primary failure point. Riders navigating pothole-ridden urban areas face 3x higher risk of sudden collapses according to internal stress tests conducted at MIT's Mobility Lab.

Consumers should immediately cease using affected G30P and G30LP models purchased between January 2020 and February 2025. The company's maintenance kit includes torque specifications requiring specialized hex wrenches not typically found in household toolsets.

Regulatory bodies are pushing for standardized folding mechanism certifications. California's Transportation Department recently implemented mandatory quarterly inspections for shared scooter fleets - a protocol private owners should emulate.