San Diego Union-Tribune

TENN. COMPANY REFUSING REQUEST TO RECALL 67M AIR BAG INFLATORS

Agency says they can explode, hurling harmful shrapnel

- BY TOM KRISHER Krisher writes for The Associated Press.

A Tennessee company could be heading for a legal battle with U.S. auto safety regulators after refusing a request that millions of potentiall­y dangerous air bag inflators be recalled.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion is demanding that ARC Automotive Inc. of Knoxville recall 67 million inflators in the U.S. because they could explode and hurl shrapnel. At least two people have been killed in the U.S. and Canada, and seven others have been hurt as a result of defective ARC inflators, the agency said.

The recall would cover a large portion of the 284 million vehicles now on U.S. roads, but the percentage is difficult to determine. Some have ARC inflators for both the driver and front passenger.

In a letter posted Friday, the agency told ARC that it has tentativel­y concluded after an eight-year investigat­ion that ARC front driver and passenger inflators have a safety defect.

“Air bag inflators that project metal fragments into vehicle occupants, rather than properly inflating the attached air bag, create an unreasonab­le risk of death and injury,” Stephen Ridella, director of NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigat­ion, wrote in a letter to ARC.

But ARC responded that it no defect exists in the inflators, and that any problems are related to isolated manufactur­ing issues.

The next step in the process is for NHTSA to schedule a public hearing. It could then take the company to court to force a recall.

“We disagree with NHTSA’s new sweeping request when extensive field testing has found no inherent defect,” ARC said in a statement Friday night.

Also Friday, NHTSA posted documents showing that General Motors is recalling nearly 1 million vehicles equipped with ARC inflators. The recall covers certain 20142017 Buick Enclave, Chevrolet Traverse, and GMC Acadia SUVs.

The automaker says an inflator explosion “may result in sharp metal fragments striking the driver or other occupants, resulting in serious injury or death.”

Owners will be notified by letter starting June 25, but no fix is available yet. They’ll get another letter when one is ready.

GM says it will offer “courtesy transporta­tion” on a case-by-case basis to owners who fear driving vehicles that are part of the recall.

The company said that it’s doing the recall, which expands previous actions, “out of an abundance of caution and with the safety of our customers as our highest priority.”

One of the two deaths was a mother of 10 who was killed in what appeared to be an otherwise minor crash in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula in the summer of 2021. Police reports show that a metal inflator fragment hit her neck in a crash involving a 2015 Chevrolet Traverse SUV.

At least a dozen automakers have the allegedly faulty inflators in use, including Volkswagen, Ford, BMW and GM, NHTSA said.

The agency contends that welding debris from the manufactur­ing process can block an “exit orifice” for gas that is released to fill the air bag in a crash. Any blockage can cause pressure to build in the inflator, blowing it apart and hurling metal fragments, Ridella’s letter says.

But in a response to Ridella dated May 11, ARC Vice President of Product Integrity Steve Gold wrote that NHTSA’s position is not based on any objective technical or engineerin­g conclusion about a defect, “but rather conclusory statements regarding hypothesiz­ed blockage of the inflator orifice from ‘weld slag.’”

He wrote that welding debris has not been confirmed as the cause in any of the seven inflator ruptures in the U.S. ARC contends that only five have ruptured while in use, and that “does not support a finding that a systemic and prevalent defect exists in this population.”

Gold also writes that manufactur­ers must do recalls, not equipment manufactur­ers like ARC. NHTSA’s recall demand, he wrote, exceeds the agency’s legal authority.

In a federal lawsuit filed last year, plaintiffs alleged that ARC’s inflators use ammonium nitrate as a secondary propellant to inflate the air bags. The propellant is pressed into tablets that can expand and develop microscopi­c holes if exposed to moisture. Degraded tablets have a larger surface area, causing them to burn too fast and ignite too big of an explosion, according to the lawsuit.

The explosion can blow apart a metal canister housing the chemical, sending metal shards into the cabin. Ammonium nitrate, used in fertilizer and as a cheap explosive, is so dangerous that it can burn too fast even without moisture present, the lawsuit says.

 ?? ADAM LAU AP FILE ?? ARC Automotive responded to the NHTSA’s recall request in a letter by saying any problems with its air bag inflators were isolated manufactur­ing issues.
ADAM LAU AP FILE ARC Automotive responded to the NHTSA’s recall request in a letter by saying any problems with its air bag inflators were isolated manufactur­ing issues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States