The Palm Beach Post

Takata air bags like ‘grenade,’ report says, but fewer than half have been fixed

- — CHARLES ELMORE, PROTECTING YOUR POCKET

A new report says it’s like having a grenade in your car. Or a ticking time bomb. Years into the largest and most complex vehicle recall in U.S. history, fewer than half of recalled Takata airbag inflators are fixed. The overall repair rate for driver and passenger airbags stands at about 46.8 percent, a government website shows.

The most critical warnings involve certain 2001 to 2003 Honda and Acura models, and the risks are considered highest in high-humidity regions including Florida.

The recall is so huge some phases of it will not roll out until 2019, with up to 70 million airbags affected. Currently there are an estimated 46 million defective airbag inflators under recall in approximat­ely 34 million U.S. vehicles from 19 manufactur­ers, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion.

About 19.6 million airbags had been repaired by late October.

“The words ‘grenade’ and ‘ticking time bomb’ accurately convey the lethal potential of these defective inflators,” says a status report by an independen­t monitor released this week. “To date, at least 13 people in the U.S. have died from injuries inflicted by defective Takata airbag inflators.”

The status report sees “meaningful progress” by automakers and regulators but finds “much room for improvemen­t.”

In these fatalities, the report notes, the Takata airbag inflator, “instead of properly inflating to cushion the victim and prevent injury, has detonated in an explosion that tore apart its steel inflator housing and sprayed high-velocity metal shards at the victim. The victims have died from blunt head trauma, severance of the spine at the neck or extreme blood loss from laceration­s to the chest, neck or face.” Hundreds more have been seriously injured.

Visit NHSTA.gov to see if your vehicle is under recall. If so, repairs are free, but talk to your dealer to see if replacemen­t parts are available.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES 2015 ?? A deployed air bag is seen in a 2001 Honda Accord at a salvage yard in Medley two years ago. Hondas from this model year are considered at highest risk from defective Takata air bag inflators, which are at risk for exploding.
JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES 2015 A deployed air bag is seen in a 2001 Honda Accord at a salvage yard in Medley two years ago. Hondas from this model year are considered at highest risk from defective Takata air bag inflators, which are at risk for exploding.

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