Chattanooga Times Free Press

Automakers improve quality in survey

- BY TOM KRISHER

DETROIT — A survey of new-vehicle buyers finds car and truck quality hit a record high this year as automakers started to clear up bugs with infotainme­nt systems.

The annual survey by J.D. Power finds buyers reported a record-low 93 problems per 100 vehicles during the first three months of ownership, four problems fewer than last year.

The survey also found Korean brands Genesis, Kia and Hyundai claimed the top three spots for the first time in new vehicle quality.

Porsche and Ford rounded out the top five.

J.D. Power also found the Detroit three improved their quality faster than the industry as a whole. Fiat Chrysler knocked off seven problems, while Ford and General Motors each dropped five.

The lowest-ranking brands were Land Rover, Jaguar and Volvo.

Touch-screen infotainme­nt systems such as radios, cellular phone connection­s and navigation remained the category with the highest number of problems this year, but J.D. Power said it improved for the third straight year. The progress was led by fewer problems with voice recognitio­n systems.

Dave Sargent, J.D. Power’s vice president of global automotive, said automakers have listened to consumers and are making high-quality vehicles. But he cautioned that companies must rein in rising problems with new driverassi­st systems such as collision avoidance and lane-keeping.

“Avoiding problems with safety and driver assistance technology is critical,” he said in a statement. “Otherwise automakers will not easily overcome consumer resistance to fully automated cars.”

Genesis, Hyundai’s luxury brand, had only 68 problems per 100 vehicles, while Kia had 72 and Hyundai had 74, according to the survey. Land Rover had 160 problems.

Of the eight categories measured by the survey, vehicle exterior improved the most to 15.2 problems per 100 vehicles, from 16.6 in 2017. Improvemen­ts included less wind noise and fewer paint imperfecti­ons.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A wheel of the 2016 Kia Optima is displayed at the New York Internatio­nal Auto Show. The annual survey by J.D. Power finds buyers reported a record-low 93 problems per 100 vehicles during the first three months of ownership, four problems fewer than...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A wheel of the 2016 Kia Optima is displayed at the New York Internatio­nal Auto Show. The annual survey by J.D. Power finds buyers reported a record-low 93 problems per 100 vehicles during the first three months of ownership, four problems fewer than...

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