Has Lipo Max faced safety warnings or recalls and when (year)?
Executive summary
The reporting provided contains no documentation that a product named "Lipo Max" has been the subject of a formal safety warning or government recall; the recall databases and agency pages referenced here do not list that product by name in the excerpts supplied (see FDA recall archive guidance and CPSC recall listings) [1][2][3]. What is well-documented across the supplied sources is a broad set of safety warnings and manufacturer instructions about lithium‑polymer (LiPo) batteries in general — the category to which a product called "Lipo Max" would presumably belong — but those general warnings are different from a product-specific recall or regulatory action [4][5][6][7].
1. No sourced evidence of a Lipo Max recall in the provided reporting
Across the agency and recall-oriented sources included in the materials, there is guidance on how to search for archived recalls and lists of recalled products, but none of the provided snippets include an entry naming "Lipo Max" as the subject of a safety alert or recall notice; the FDA explains that recall pages are available and archived and recommends search of the archive by product or company name [1], while CPSC and similar recall pages catalog products and encourage users to search by name [2][3], yet the excerpts supplied do not show a Lipo Max recall. That absence in the supplied reporting means the claim "Lipo Max was recalled" is not supported by these documents; it does not prove exhaustively that no recall exists outside these sources, but it does mean the provided reporting contains no year or notice to answer the question affirmatively.
2. Warnings about LiPo batteries are common and may be conflated with product recalls
Multiple manufacturer and hobbyist safety pages warn that LiPo batteries can swell, ignite, or suffer thermal events if misused, and they lay out charging, storage, and disposal precautions — warnings that appear on product pages and owner manuals rather than as regulatory recalls (examples include manufacturer safety pages and hobbyist advisories in the supplied material) [4][5][6][7]. These generalized safety cautions are frequent and emphatic because the hazard profile of LiPo chemistry is well-known among manufacturers and enthusiasts, but they are not the same thing as a formal recall or safety alert issued by agencies like the FDA, CPSC, or NHTSA.
3. Where recalls would appear and how to verify product‑specific actions
If a product such as “Lipo Max” had been subject to an official recall, it would typically appear in agency recall databases: the FDA’s Recalls, Market Withdrawals & Safety Alerts (with archived search instructions) [1], the CPSC’s recalls pages and data feed [2][3], or other sector‑specific registries (e.g., NHTSA for vehicle components) [8]. The supplied snippets explain how to search those archives by product or company name, which is the appropriate next step to confirm whether any formal year‑stamped recall exists; none of the supplied excerpts, however, include a recall entry named “Lipo Max” or a year tied to such an action.
4. Alternative explanations and reporting limitations
Two alternative possibilities should be acknowledged: first, a manufacturer or retailer might issue voluntary safety guidance or a market withdrawal that is publicized on its own website rather than (or prior to) being posted in the agency extracts provided here, and second, a recall could exist in records not included in the supplied snippets or be catalogued under a different brand or product name. The supplied material does not allow verification of those scenarios; it only shows broad recall‑search mechanisms and LiPo safety advice, not a product‑specific recall notice for “Lipo Max” [1][2][3][4].
5. Conclusion: available reporting does not show a Lipo Max recall or a year for one
Based on the reporting provided, there is no cited safety warning or regulatory recall for a product called “Lipo Max,” and therefore no year can be identified from these sources; the material instead documents general LiPo safety warnings from manufacturers and hobbyist communities and points to the proper recall databases to search for product‑specific alerts [4][5][6][7][1][2][3]. To resolve the question definitively, a direct search of the FDA and CPSC recall archives by the exact product and manufacturer name, or a look at the manufacturer’s press releases, would be the next step.