General Motors' Australian subsidiary Holden recalled more than 45,000 Commodores today over a potential seatbelt fault, following withdrawals by rivals Toyota and Hyundai due to various issues last week.
The recall, which affects 41,933 cars in Australia and another 3,744 in New Zealand - almost all of the new model Commodores that went on sale last year - was precautionary, Holden said.
"There have been no confirmed reports of this condition in the field. The issue was raised from an internal investigation following an isolated instance at the plant," a spokesman for the firm said in a statement.
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Holden said the pre-tensioner - a mechanism that tightens a seatbelt when a crash occurs - of certain MY14 VF Commodore and WN Caprice models could make contact with a bolt at the base of the seat belt buckle assembly, wearing it out.
"In this circumstance, if the pre-tensioner wiring harness develops wear as a result of contacting the bolt, the airbag warning light may illuminate on the instrument cluster and there is a risk that the pre-tensioner may not deploy in the event of an accident," Holden said.
"All other safety devices, including airbags, are unaffected by this condition."
The recall is Holden's fourth in Australia this year, with the previous ones involving brake lights, manual driveshafts and transmission mounts of vehicles.
Last week, South Korea's Hyundai recalled 140,000 vehicles in the United States and Puerto Rico over an air bag issue, while the world's biggest automaker, Toyota, recalled 520,000 vehicles over a range of issues.
In April, Toyota Australia pulled almost 300,000 cars as part of a global recall of 6.39 million vehicles worldwide by the Japanese firm over various concerns.