General Motors to recall 1 mln vehicles due to faulty airbags
General Motors, the American automobile manufacturer, has recently stated that it will recall nearly 1 million sports vehicles in the United States, citing the reason to be faulty airbags. The statement added that the inflator for the driver seat's airbag may explode when deployed, hence the sudden recall.
The recall covers 994,763 Buick Enclave, Chevrolet Traverse, and GMC Acadia vehicles from the 2014 through 2017 model years with modules produced by ARC Automotive Inc. Dealers will replace the driver's airbag module.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said a driver in Michigan of a 2017 Chevrolet Traverse was in a crash in which the front-driver airbag inflator ruptured during deployment causing facial injuries.
An April 25 inspection confirmed that the front driver airbag inflator ruptured in the vehicle.
General Motors said it was still investigating the issue with the assistance of a third-party engineering firm. "General Motors is taking this expanded field action out of an abundance of caution and with the safety of our customers as our highest priority," the Detroit automaker said.
The company said it was aware of two prior ruptures of ARC-manufactured airbag inflators in 2015 Chevrolet Traverse vehicles, and GM conducted two earlier small recalls of about 3,000 ARC inflators.
All three rupture events in Chevrolet Traverse vehicles involved the same inflator variant.
ARC noted in a letter made public Friday that no root cause for those ruptures has been identified by ARC or GM. ARC said it was assessing the scope of GM's recall.
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