Apex Gaming PCs remembers almost 18,000 energy provides over lacking security labels — the repair is a warning sticker despatched by mail, items are completely secure
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission issued a recall on April 16 for roughly 17,730 Manik and Apex-branded ATX energy provides offered by Apex Gaming PCs as a result of the items shipped with no everlasting warning label figuring out electrical shock and electrocution hazards.
Affected PSUs cowl 4 wattages — 450W, 750W, 1,000W, and 1,200W — and have been offered in each black and white colorways, and went out to clients from December 2021 by means of February 2026, each as standalone elements and pre-installed inside the corporate’s gaming desktops. An further 500 items have been offered in Canada, the place Health Canada has issued a parallel recall. No accidents or incidents have been reported.
Some might see this as a case of bureaucracy gone mad, but this type of labeling is standard practice because power supplies contain high-voltage capacitors that can retain a lethal electrical charge even after the unit is unplugged and powered off. Established manufacturers such as Corsair and be quiet! include permanent on-product warnings as a basic requirement; Apex shipped these units for more than four years without one.
The company appears to have recognized this before the recall, publishing a blog post on February 22nd and updating its safety guidelines page with prominent language warning customers never to open their PSUs, citing the capacitor hazard. The CPSC recall followed just under two months later, filed as a “Fast Track Recall,” a designation that means the company volunteered to skip the agency’s preliminary investigation and proceed directly to a remedy.
As for that remedy, the CPSC lists two options: the first and most obvious, a free “repair” in the form of a single UL-recognized, heat-resistant adhesive label containing the missing warning. Apex will mail the sticker to affected customers via USPS. Alternatively, users who would rather not apply the label themselves can request a free replacement PSU. The company will ship the new unit along with a return box and prepaid shipping label for the original. Meanwhile, the CPSC advises consumers to stop using the recalled PSUs immediately and to avoid opening, disassembling, or servicing them under any circumstances.
Apex Gaming PCs can be reached at 833-946-1418 (Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. CT), by email at support@apexgamingpcs.com, or through the live chat on its website. The company’s dedicated recall page is at apexgamingpcs.com/pages/psu-recall.
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