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FDA says 561 deaths tied to recalled Philips sleep apnea machines
(www.cbsnews.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
This isnt even about the materials breaking down, every product breaks down eventually. But cars from 30 years ago have better critical air path separation than that.... how badly did they fuck up the engineering to even make it possible for housing components to get sucked into the intake?
Oh, it probably would have cost an additional $0.45 per unit to inject the housing in a different way that provides a hard barrier between the mechanicals and air intake so it got shitcanned...
Maybe more like $0.05. But yeah..
Well either way the extra profit is worth the realized potential carnage. Oh well I guess, no one will go to jail anyway
I'm not sure, but your comment seems to imply an assumption that the foam was designed to be external to the air path and is getting unintentionally sucked in? That's not the case, the foam is literally only inside an "air chamber" that the air directly travels through.