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Takata air-bag recall expanded with 10th death being reported

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Bloomberg
Millions more vehicles are being recalled to replace defective Takata Corp air bags as another death was linked to the devices that have been found to spray metal pieces into vehicles, the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said.

Two recalls announced Friday cover 5 million air bag inflators in cars made by Ford, Volkswagen AG, Honda Motor Co, Daimler AG, Audi AG, Mazda Motor Corp., Saab AB and BMW AG. NHTSA has been coordinating the largest-ever US automotive recall, which previously covered 23 million inflators in 19 million vehicles with Takata air bags.

The agency couldn't immediately say how many additional vehicles would be recalled because some vehicles have multiple inflators and some may have been previously recalled. Owners can check on their vehicles at safercar.gov.
 

The driver of a 2006 Ford Motor Co Ranger pickup died in December after the truck swerved off a road in South Carolina and hit an obstruction, the agency said. Agency investigators said that the Takata air-bag exploded, and the coroner had previously determined the rupture contributed to the death, NHTSA spokesman Gordon Trowbridge said.

In addition to the 10 fatalities, nine of them in the US, about 100 people have been injured by Takata air bags.

"This is a massive safety crisis," Trowbridge said.

Ford said it has "very limited information" about the latest incident and is working with NHTSA to review the circumstances of the South Carolina death.

"We are saddened to hear about the driver's death and offer our sincere condolences to the family of the driver," Ford spokesman John Cavangany said in an e-mail. "We are working with the agency to review the available information, but we have very limited information at this point. If we find an issue with our vehicles, we take prompt action to address customer safety."

Takata said it's continuing to conduct tests, ramp up replacement kit production, and trying to raise consumer awareness of recalled vehicles.

"Our heartfelt condolences go out to the driver's family," said Robert Rendine, a US spokesman for the Tokyo-based parts supplier. "We are cooperating fully with regulators and our automotive customers and continue to support all actions that advance vehicle safety."

One of the two recalls NHTSA is ordering - to replace driver's side air bags with similar inflators to the one involved in the latest fatal crash - involves vehicles made by Ford, Mazda, Audi, VW, Daimler and Saab, the agency said. Approximately 1 million inflators are included in the action.

The inflator had been involved in previous testing without experiencing a rupture, Trowbridge said.

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First Published: Jan 23 2016 | 9:15 PM IST

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