7 Kasım 2014 Cuma

Enormous Takata Airbag Recall: Every thing You Want to Know, Including Complete List of Affected Vehicles





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The automotive planet and beyond is buzzing about the huge airbag recall covering numerous millions of vehicles in the U.S. from practically 2 dozen brands. Here’s what you need to know about the problem which automobiles could have the defective, shrapnel-shooting inflator parts from Japanese supplier Takata and what to do if your vehicle is 1 of them.


* SCROLL TO BOTTOM FOR Full LIST OF Affected Automobiles *


The situation requires defective inflator and propellent devices that might deploy improperly in the occasion of a crash, shooting metal fragments into vehicle occupants. A lot more than 7 million cars are potentially impacted in the United States.


Initially, only 6 makes were involved when Takata announced the fault in April 2013, but a Toyota recall in June this year—along with new admissions from Takata that it had little clue as to which automobiles employed its defective inflators, or even what the root trigger was—prompted more automakers to problem identical recalls. In July, NHTSA forced added regional recalls in high-humidity regions including Florida, Hawaii, and the U.S. Virgin Islands to collect removed parts and send them to Takata for review.


Another main recall issued on October 20 expanded the impacted vehicles across many brands. For its component, Toyota mentioned it would begin to replace defective passenger-side inflators starting October 25 if parts are unavailable, nevertheless, it has advised its dealers to disable the airbags and affix “Do Not Sit Here” messages to the dashboard.


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Whilst Toyota says there have been no related injuries or deaths involving its autos, a New York Times report in September found a total of at least 139 reported injuries across all automakers. In specific, there have been at least 2 deaths and 30 injuries in Honda cars. According to the Occasions, Honda and Takata allegedly have recognized about the faulty inflators given that 2004 but failed to notify NHTSA in prior recall filings (which started in 2008) that the impacted airbags had really ruptured or were linked to injuries and deaths.


Takata initial mentioned that propellant chemical substances had been mishandled and improperly stored for the duration of assembly, which supposedly caused the metal airbag inflators to burst open due to excessive stress inside. In July, the organization blamed humid weather and spurred additional recalls.


According to documents reviewed by Reuters, Takata says that rust, negative welds, and even chewing gum dropped into at least a single inflator are also at fault. The identical documents show that in 2002, Takata’s plant in Mexico allowed a defect price that was “6 to 8 occasions above” acceptable limits, or roughly 60 to 80 defective parts for each 1 million airbag inflators shipped. The company’s study has however to attain a final conclusion and report the findings to NHTSA.


UPDATE 11/7: The New York Instances has published a report suggesting that Takata knew about the airbag problems in 2004, conducting secret tests off work hours to verify the difficulty. The results confirmed main problems with the inflators, and engineers quickly began researching a answer. But instead of notifying federal security regulators and moving forward with fixes, Takata executives ordered its engineers to destroy the information and dispose of the physical proof. This occurred a full 4 years ahead of Takata publicly acknowledged the issue. Needless to say, the supplier has a lot of explaining to do.



AFFECTED Cars (total quantity if known in parentheses):


Acura: 2002–2003 CL and TL 2003–2006 MDX 2005 RL


BMW (627,615): 2000–2005 3-series sedan and wagon 2000–2006 3-series coupe and convertible 2001–2006 M3 coupe and convertible


Chrysler (371,309, like Dodge): 2005–2008 Chrysler 300 2007–2008 Aspen


Dodge/Ram (371,309, including Chrysler): 2003–2008 Dodge Ram 1500 2005–2008 Ram 2500, Dakota, and Durango 2006–2008 Ram 3500 and 4500 2008 Ram 5500


Ford (58,669): 2004 Ranger 2005–2006 GT 2005–2007 Mustang


Honda (5,051,364, including Acura): 2001–2007 Accord 2001–2005 Civic 2002–2006 CR-V 2002–2004 Odyssey 2003–2011 Element 2003–2007 Pilot 2006 Ridgeline


Infiniti: 2001–2004 Infiniti I30/I35 2002–2003 Infiniti QX4 2003–2005 Infiniti FX35/FX45


Lexus: 2002–2005 SC430


Mazda (64,872): 2003–2007 Mazda 6 2006–2007 Mazdaspeed 6 2004–2008 Mazda RX-8 2004–2005 MPV 2004 B-series


Mitsubishi (11,985): 2004–2005 Lancer 2006–2007 Raider


Nissan (694,626, including Infiniti): 2001–2003 Maxima 2001–2004 Pathfinder 2002–2004 Nissan Sentra


Pontiac: 2003–2005 Vibe


Saab: 2005 9-2X


Subaru (17,516): 2003–2005 Baja, Legacy, Outback 2004–2005 Impreza, Impreza WRX, Impreza WRX STI


Toyota (877,000, like Lexus and Pontiac Vibe): 2002–2005 Toyota Corolla and Sequoia 2003–2005 Matrix, Tundra



We will update this list as quickly as new information is offered, but you can access NHTSA’s own operating tally of affected vehicles here. For further details about your specific vehicle, go to the manufacturer’s customer site or use NHTSA’s VIN-lookup tool.




This story was originally published on October 21, 2014. It has subsequently been updated to reflect the newest findings and official list of impacted vehicles.







Enormous Takata Airbag Recall: Every thing You Want to Know, Including Complete List of Affected Vehicles

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