Filed under:
Government/Legal,
Recalls,
Safety,
Honda,
Mazda,
Nissan,
Toyota
Most vehicle recalls that take place these days are a result of some problem that happens during the manufacturing process by the automaker, but as we see here, parts suppliers can also factor in to problematic safety issues.
Automotive News is reporting that a total of 3.4 million vehicles produced by Japanese automakers between 2000 and 2004 are being recalled globally due to faulty airbags produced by an outside supplier, Takata Corp.
According to the report, vehicles from
Toyota,
Honda,
Nissan and
Mazda are being recalled because of passenger front airbags that do not inflate properly. Globally, Toyota is said to be recalling around 1.73 million cars including 510,000 in the US composed of
Toyota Corolla,
Matrix,
Sequoia and
Tundra as well as the
Lexus SC430 for the 2001 through 2003 model years; this is the
second time this year the 2003 Corolla and Matrix have been recalled for an airbag problem. Honda is recalling 1.14 million models, Nissan another 480,000 and Mazda 45,463. The article says that Takata supplied faulty airbags to non-Japanese automakers, but it did not specify which ones.
Honda and Toyota have released information on their own websites about the recall, while Nissan and Mazda have not yet commented. Read
official press releases from Honda and Toyota, below, and look for updates as we have word from the others.
Continue reading Toyota, Honda, Mazda and Nissan recall 3.4 million vehicles for faulty airbags
Toyota, Honda, Mazda and Nissan recall 3.4 million vehicles for faulty airbags originally appeared on
Autoblog on Thu, 11 Apr 2013 09:15:00 EST. Please see our
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