Morning Sun

U.S. probing engine fires in nearly 1.9M Toyota RAV4 SUVS

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The U.S. government is investigat­ing complaints of engine compartmen­t fires in nearly 1.9 million Toyota RAV4 small SUVS.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion began investigat­ing after getting 11 fire complaints involving the 2013 through 2018 model years.

The RAV4 is the topselling vehicle in the U.S. that isn’t a pickup truck.

In documents posted Monday, the agency says fires start on the left side of the engine compartmen­t. A terminal on the 12-volt battery may short to the frame, causing loss of electrical power, engine stalling or a fire.

Most of the fires happened while the vehicles are being driven, but four owners complained that fire broke out with the engine off.

A Toyota spokesman would not answer questions about whether the SUVS should be parked outdoors until the matter is resolved, but said the company is cooperatin­g in the probe. A spokeswoma­n for NHTSA said she is checking into whether the RAV4S should stay outdoors due to the risk of catching fire with the engine off. NHTSA says improper battery installati­on or front-end collision repair was a factor in the complaints. The agency says the RAV4 has a higher number of fire complaints in the battery area than comparable vehicles.

Investigat­ors will try to understand better what is contributi­ng to the fires. The vehicles aren’t being recalled but the investigat­ion could lead to one.

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