Los Angeles Times

Many ‘time bomb’ air bags still on road

Ten years into Takata recall, 60,000 autos haven’t been fixed.

- Washington post

Alexander Brangman finds comfort in rememberin­g how long his daughter lived — 26 years, 11 months, 9 hours and 15 minutes — rather than the horrible and needless way she died.

Jewel Brangman, an academic all-American in high school, about to pursue a doctorate at Stanford, had no need to know much about the rental car she drove north toward Los Angeles on a sunny September Sunday almost four years ago.

Then came a relatively minor crash — she rearended a minivan — and her air bag exploded with a spray of razor-sharp metal shards that severed her carotid artery.

Ten years after the biggest safety recall in U.S. history began, Honda says there are more than 60,000 vehicles on the nation’s roads equipped with what experts have called a ticking time bomb: defective air bags like the one that killed Jewel Brangman.

They are the most deadly air bags remaining in the recall involving more than 37 million vehicles built by 19 automakers. At least 22 people worldwide have been killed and hundreds more permanentl­y disfigured when the air bags that deployed to protect them exploded and sprayed shrapnel.

The worst among the bad bags are known as Alphas, driver-side air bags installed in Hondas that have up to a 50% chance they will explode on impact. The 62,307 people still driving with them, many in older-model cars that may have changed hands several times, either have ignored the recall warnings or never received them, Honda said.

With the number of deaths and disfigurem­ents continuing to climb — the latest fatality was in January — automakers and federal regulators have rewritten the rule book in their outreach efforts, including deploying teams to knock on doors of Honda owners who have not responded to recall notices.

“We’re good at repairing vehicles,” said Rick Schostek, executive vice president of Honda North America, “but finding and convincing customers of older-model vehicles to complete recalls — now, that has proved a difficult challenge.”

The 2001 Honda Civic that Brangman was driving came from Sunset Car Rentals, a small agency that bought the vehicle at auction almost three years earlier, after it was involved in a crash and was issued a salvage title. It had been under recall since 2009. Honda said it had mailed four recall notices without getting any response.

Brangman’s crash was the epitome of a fender bender: She struck a minivan from behind, damaging its bumper and that of the car she was driving, and buckling the hood of her car.

“There was minimal damage,” her father said. “It was highly questionab­le if the air bag should have deployed at all. It was something Jewel should have walked away from.”

Instead, “I walked in the USC trauma unit and what I saw was horrific: Here’s the beautiful, angelic human being that was my daughter hooked up to this monstrous life-support system,” Brangman said.

The doctors told him she was brain-dead.

Brangman later learned that for three weeks his daughter had been driving a rental car with a factory-equipped air bag that during the recall would come to be known as the Alpha model. A quirk in the manufactur­ing process caused the Alpha inflators to be the most deadly of the lot.

The massive recall of airbag inflators made by Takata — a company accused of suppressin­g tests revealing the f law, with three of its key executives under federal indictment — is well known to Congress and millions of Americans who have been touched by it. But tens of thousands of drivers most at risk remain oblivious to the efforts of automakers and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion.

“Our last hearing on the ongoing Takata fiasco is just further evidence that NHTSA is just rudderless,” said Sen. Bill Nelson of Florida, ranking Democrat on the Senate Commerce, Science and Transporta­tion Committee. “The latest data the committee has received from the automakers shows that individual automaker recall-completion rates are all over the place, and millions are still waiting for replacemen­t air bags.”

NHTSA has been without an administra­tor in the 15 months since President Trump entered the White House. Trump recently proposed elevating acting Director Heidi King to lead the agency. King, whose nomination will be subject to Senate confirmati­on, told the Commerce Committee last month that car companies have “made progress” on the Takata recall.

“But the progress is uneven,” she said. “Overall completion rates are not where we want them to be.”

Takata air-bag inflators degrade over time as they are exposed to humidity and repeated wide fluctuatio­n in the daily temperatur­e.

That a car may change hands three or four times during a 10-year period has made the recall more difficult, with notices from the car dealer or automaker discarded by people who sold the vehicle years earlier.

Though most Takata inflators go bad over time when exposed to temperatur­e changes and humidity, the Alpha inflators experience­d high humidity at a Takata factory in Monclova, Mexico, before they were installed.

In a 2015 response to Congress marked “confidenti­al,” Takata acknowledg­ed that the propellant that triggers the air bags had “been left in work stations during a prolonged shutdown of the assembly line, exposing them to humidity inside the plant.”

The Alpha bags were installed in more than 1 million Honda and Acura cars from 2001 to 2003. They caused 11 of the 15 U.S. fatalities when their Takata inflators ruptured.

Although there had been inklings that Takata air bags could be deadly — with fatal explosions in 2003 and 2004 — the first U.S. recall was initiated by Honda in 2008.

The 10 years that followed have been replete with allegation­s that Takata cut corners in a rush to fill orders and that the company sought to cover up tests that revealed the severity of the problem.

The genesis of the massive recall came when Takata, then a seat-belt supplier but a minor player in the air-bag industry, came up with a cost-cutting way to make air bags. A few years after the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, it used the same material that caused that explosion — ammonium nitrate — to trigger the air-bag inflators when vehicles collide.

Ammonium nitrate — unlike the relatively stable chemical tetrazole used by other manufactur­ers — can become unstable, particular­ly when it is exposed to moisture.

Takata found a ready market for its cheaper air bags, expanding rapidly to meet the demand of newly enticed automakers, including General Motors.

GM’s air-bag supplier had been the Swedish company Autoliv, but Autoliv dropped out of the competitio­n presented by Takata because it declined to use the volatile ammonium nitrate.

After a 2002 Honda Accord air bag exploded in Alabama in 2004, Takata assured Honda that the incident was an anomaly.

But at the same time Takata began testing 50 airbag inflators it had collected from junkyards. Even though two of them malfunctio­ned, Takata shut down the testing and told technician­s to wipe the data from their computers, the New York Times reported. The company denied to Congress that it had ever done the testing.

Years later, NHTSA said Takata was not “being forthcomin­g with informatio­n” or cooperatin­g with the “investigat­ion of a potentiall­y serious safety defect.”

The Justice Department fined Takata $1 billion for that.

Alexander Brangman flew to Washington last month for the committee hearing.

“Jewel was the eighth victim at the time; now worldwide there’s 22,” Brangman said afterward.

“Not prohibitin­g ammonium nitrate being used in these bags is sinful. Unethical behavior is the underlying theme. For a life to be taken when something is preventabl­e is unconscion­able to me. They should find a way to stop using these vehicles, period.”

 ??  ?? ALEXANDER BRANGMAN’S daughter Jewel, right, died after a minor car crash in 2014 in which her Takata air bag exploded and sprayed her with shrapnel.
ALEXANDER BRANGMAN’S daughter Jewel, right, died after a minor car crash in 2014 in which her Takata air bag exploded and sprayed her with shrapnel.

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