Your membership has expired

The payment for your account couldn't be processed or you've canceled your account with us.

Re-activate

ICYMI: Exploding Oven Doors, Laptops, EV Charging Speeds

Also last week at CR: What to know about cleaning gloves and ice cream scoopers, a hidden hearing aid feature you should use, and Father’s Day gift ideas

From left: an example from CSPC incident reports of an image a consumer took of their shattered Frigidaire ovens, Samsung Galaxy Book4 Ultra, and a car charging.
Last week at CR, we shared what we know about the nearly 400 complaints to the CPSC about the glass in oven doors spontaneously shattering, laptops, and EV charging speeds.
Photos: CPSC, Samsung, Getty Images

Our In Case You Missed It series highlights recent ratings, news, and investigations.

In this article

Our team of experts identified nearly 400 reports of range oven doors spontaneously shattering and asked the CPSC to investigate. We measured the processing power, display quality, and battery life of laptops for easy-to-read scores across more than 170 laptops and nearly 20 Chromebooks. How long does it take to charge a popular electric vehicle? Since automakers use confusing metrics to sound impressive, we calculated it ourselves. At CR, we test everyday essentials—even the ones that are less obvious, like cleaning gloves and ice cream scoopers. One of the best hearing aid features is one that no one is using. And we found some great picks to help you get ahead of Dad’s big day (June 21 is Father’s Day, pass it on).


Four examples from CSPC incident reports of images taken by consumers of their shattered Frigidaire ovens.
Consumers report being startled by glass oven range doors that shattered spontaneously, often when the oven wasn't even on.

Source: CPSC Source: CPSC

Oven doors are spontaneously exploding, according to our analysis of reports filed with the CPSC. Most of the stoves are made by Frigidaire.

In a 15-month stretch, the CPSC has received nearly 400 complaints about the glass in oven doors shattering spontaneously, resulting in more than 40 injuries, according to incident reports. CR has asked the CPSC to investigate the claims, but no recall has been announced yet.

What to know:

While only around 10 of the ovens named were made by Samsung, as of this writing, Samsung is the only company offering free oven door repairs, regardless of warranty status.

We broke down each company’s response, which models may be affected, and how to report an incident to the CPSC and your oven’s manufacturer.

FYI: We’ve also updated the best French-door refrigerators. (You should know French-door refrigerators aren’t the most reliable, according to our data. Consider a top-freezer or bottom-freezer instead.)


Person on Samsung Galaxy Book4 Ultra laptop, LG gram Pro 16 Inch, Copilot+ PC, and Apple MacBook Air - 2026
Laptops from Apple, Asus, and HP are among the best performers in CR's ratings.

Photos: Consumer Reports, Samsung Photos: Consumer Reports, Samsung

Laptops are pricier than ever, but the most compelling model we've tested recently is the budget-friendly MacBook Neo.

We have ratings for more than 170 laptops and nearly 20 Chromebooks, including the affordable and CR-recommended Apple MacBook Neo.

In the meantime, we’ve highlighted the best laptops of 2026, across types and uses.

For more, like our picks for budget laptops and Chromebooks, read our guide.


Electrify America charging Porsche
A Porsche Taycan at an Electrify America DC fast charging station.

Automakers love to tout how fast their EVs charge, but they use confusing numbers. So we developed our own ranking.

Automakers often brag about how quickly their EVs go from almost empty to 80 percent full.

But since there’s no standard measurement for reporting on how quickly an EV can charge, it’s difficult to compare vehicles, says CR’s auto test development director, Alex Knizek.

To cut through the noise, CR ranks popular new EVs by the number of miles of range they add per minute of DC fast charging and per hour of Level 2 charging.

For more: Sometimes the most popular small or luxury SUV isn’t the best. (Looking at you, Chevrolet Equinox 2026.) We highlighted what to buy when that’s true. 


Cleaning gloves—not fun. Ice cream scoopers—fun. And you probably need both, so we found the best.

Cleaning gloves and ice cream scoopers are the kind of everyday kitchen essentials you may not think much about when you buy them. (Oh, Aldi is having a sale? Works just fine for me.) But our writer, Lisa Fogarty, actually found differences during testing.

For the four best cleaning gloves, we:

  • Used a gauge in our labs to measure the force required to puncture them
  • Wore them while washing dishes to see how well they grip wet items
  • Soaked them in bleach cleaner overnight to test their chemical resistance

For the three best ice cream scoopers, we:

  • Enlisted three testers (our writer, her husband, and their 12-year-old son Colin)
  • Tested scoopers on cartons of Häagen-Dazs just pulled from the freezer
  • Weighed the scoopers and measured their handles

Hear us out: The next time you upgrade your hearing aids, make sure they have both a telecoil and Auracast capability.

New Bluetooth technology, called Auracast, is expected to replace existing tech like telecoil—a tiny wire receiver that picks up magnetic sound signals from assistive listening systems and reduces background noise for clearer sound—in the coming years. 

But it’s still five to 10 years away from being widely available, and stories like Pam Parfitt’s are important—her life changed when she used telecoil for the first time. Experts are trying to combat the perception that telecoil is on its way out.

For more about telecoils, Auracast, and what to do, read our article. But the (very) short of it is this: Make sure your next pair of hearing aids has both a telecoil and Auracast capability.


Since dads can’t catch the one thing they truly deserve (a break), here are 30 gift ideas for celebrating Father’s Day.

We’re about a month away from Father’s Day, and if you’re anything like me, you haven’t even thought about it (and have, let’s be honest, dropped the ball once or twice in your life).

Well, here’s Mary Beth Quirk’s gift to us both: A list of the best gifts for dad from CR’s Shopping and Deals editor extraordinaire, meaning all we have to do is click “Add to cart” before it’s too late.

In it are gifts for busy dads, cheffy dads, techy dads, toolly dads, and dads who deserve a break. If it’s a tight holiday this year, check out our gifts for under $50. And if nothing else, send a card. Honestly, I think Dad will just be happy to hear from you.


Fresh From the Labs

We’re constantly testing the latest products and retesting existing stock. Here are last week’s drops we didn’t mention above:


Justin Krajeski

Justin Krajeski is a reporter covering a range of travel and healthy-living topics, including e-bikes, treadmills, exercise bikes, and ellipticals. Before joining CR in 2022, he covered style for Wirecutter, part of The New York Times, where he began working in 2015. Justin lives in Brooklyn, N.Y.