Cape Times

Ford Kuga catches fire in Ekurhuleni

- Khanyisile Ngcobo

ANOTHER Ford Kuga has gone up in flames despite the manufactur­er recalling thousands of these vehicles and dealing with lawsuit threats.

Ford SA confirmed it is investigat­ing the latest incident in Ekurhuleni when a Kuga caught fire on the N12 east in Boksburg on Monday.

Ekurhuleni disaster and emergency management services spokespers­on William Ntladi said they received a call that a Ford Kuga had caught fire near the N12 east Jet Park off-ramp.

“We received the call at 8.45am and upon arrival found the vehicle already alight.

“The owner, who was alone at the time, said he was driving when he suddenly saw fire coming out of the engine,” Ntladi said.

The owner was able to get out of the vehicle and escaped unharmed.

Ntladi said they managed to extinguish the flames before handing the scene over to the Ekurhuleni metro police for investigat­ion.

Metro police spokespers­on Kobeli Mokheseng said officers secured the area while firemen doused the blaze.

“The owner arranged to have the vehicle, which was partially burnt, towed to allow the reopening of the highway.”

Ford SA spokespers­on Minesh Bhagaloo said they were looking into the incident.

“We became aware of it through social media and we are currently investigat­ing what exactly happened.”

He was unable to confirm the model that was affected, as the matter had just been brought to their attention, but he added that all protocol was being followed to recover the vehicle and investigat­e the cause of the fire.

He further urged owners whose vehicles were first mentioned in the recall to take them in for a phase two check-up.

Hardly a week ago, the car-maker announced that it was initiating phase two of the recall action involving its faulty Kuga 1.6 models.

“Ford Motor Company Southern Africa has commenced with phase 2 of the safety recall action for all affected Kuga 1.6 models and is requesting customers to schedule an appointmen­t with their dealer to have the vehicle enhancemen­ts completed.

“This second phase is designed to mitigate the risk of an engine fire resulting from a cracked cylinder head caused by a loss of coolant, and applies to all affected Kuga 1.6 models built at the Valencia Assembly Plant in Spain between May 2012 and September 27, 2014,” Ford said at the time.

Ford first announced its recall campaign in January amid controvers­y surroundin­g more than 40 reported engine fires on this make of vehicle.

After Ford had determined that the fires were caused by engine overheatin­g and consequent oil leaking from cracked cylinder heads, the first phase of the recall involved replacing various cooling-system components, updating software and conducting an oil leak check on the cylinder head.

In January, lawyer Rod Montano was quoted in the news as saying he had handed in 31 formal claims for a class action lawsuit against the manufactur­er.

Affected Ford Kuga drivers united to file the class action lawsuit after the death of Reshall Jimmy when his Kuga caught fire.

Ford said Jimmy’s case was being investigat­ed separately because the cause of the fire was still to be establishe­d.

 ??  ?? BLAZES: In this file photo a Ford Kuga owned by Warren Krog burns out in Alberton. Ford SA is investigat­ing the latest incident in Ekurhuleni where a Kuga caught fire on the N12 on Monday. PICTURE: AP
BLAZES: In this file photo a Ford Kuga owned by Warren Krog burns out in Alberton. Ford SA is investigat­ing the latest incident in Ekurhuleni where a Kuga caught fire on the N12 on Monday. PICTURE: AP

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