Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Nissan recalls Infiniti SUVS to fix air bags

- By Tom Krisher

DETROIT >> Nissan says it’s recalling more than 1,800 Infiniti SUVs in the U.S. for an air bag problem that could send shrapnel into the passenger compartmen­t.

The recall covers some QX56 SUVs from 2013 and the QX80s from 2014. The company says inflators made by Takata Corp. were built with an incorrect outer baffle part. That can cause pressure to build up, and the inflators can rupture if driver’s side air bags are deployed.

Nissan has no reports of injuries from the problem. It was discovered after General Motors recalled 33,000 Cruze compact cars for the same problem in June. The Infiniti recall is part of a larger global recall of 260,000 Nissans announced last week.

Takata says the recall only affects GM and Nissan vehicles and is separate from another one covering 8 million vehicles in the U.S.

In that recall, prolonged exposure to high humidity can cause inflators to malfunctio­n and explode with too much force. Safety advocates say four people have died due to that problem, which affects 10 different automakers.

Some automakers have limited their recalls to a small number of highhumidi­ty areas, but lawmakers and others are demanding that recalls be expanded nationwide. Covered are cars made by Honda, Nissan, Chrysler, Ford, Mazda, Subaru, Mitsubishi, Toyota, BMW and General Motors.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion is investigat­ing the humidity issue and could expand the size of the recall.

Lawmakers say there are about 30 million vehicles on the road in the U.S. with potentiall­y defective Takata air bags.

Nissan said in documents posted Friday by NHTSA that it asked Takata about the baffle problem after General Motors recalled 33,000 Chevrolet Cruze compacts in North America last June. GM said in documents that it also went to Takata after it was sued by someone who was injured by an exploding air bag.

On Thursday, U.S. safety regulators ordered Takata to provide more informatio­n about potentiall­y faulty air bags.

The order made 36 separate requests for data on production mistakes, lawsuit settlement­s and reports of deaths or injuries that the Tokyo-based company has received. NHTSA also wants to know how many replacemen­t parts Takata can make each day and what it has discussed with automakers and competitor­s.

Takata has until Dec. 1 to turn in the informatio­n or it could face fines of $7,000 per day. A Takata spokesman said the company is cooperatin­g and will work to meet the agency’s requests.

Takata, the world’s second-largest air bag maker with 22 percent of the market, has been plagued by problems with its air bags since at least 2001.

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