Friday, November 13, 2015

General Motors Issues New Recall for Cars with Engine Fire Risk

General Motors has recalled 1.4 million older car models for a repair to prevent engine fires. This is the second recall for this problem in some of the cars.

At least 1,345 cars have caught fire even though some of them had been repaired. GM has acknowledged that the initial repair did not work, the Associated Press (AP) reports. In some of the car fires, the flames jumped to nearby structures, causing damage. GM has advised owners of recalled cars to park their cars outside until the repairs are done.

Cars covered by the recall include the 1997 to 2004 Monte Carlo, Pontiac Grand Prix, Chevy Lumina and Impala, Buick Regal and Oldsmobile Intrigue. A fire can occur when engine oils seeps through valve cover gaskets designed to keep the oil inside the engine. The gaskets deteriorate over time, and hard braking can cause oil to drip onto the hot exhaust manifold on the 3.8-liter V6 engines, where it can ignite. In 2008 and 2009, GM recalled 1.7 million cars. The gasket was replaced in some of the cars, but in the majority, only flammable plastic parts near the manifold were replaced, according to the AP.

The post-recall fires have raised questions about the speed of GM’s response and whether the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA) should have intervened earlier. Clarence Ditlow, head of the watchdog group the Center for Auto Safety, says, “Over 1,000 fires is a huge number that should have generated a safety recall by GM before now.” Ditlow says NHTSA missed the defect in its complaint database.

A GM spokesman said company tests showed that a small fire caused by dripping oil would burn out on its own. “We were trying to remove anything that would allow the flame to spread,” he said. Jake Fisher, a former GM engineer who now direct auto testing for Consumer Reports, says GM should have replaced the gasket in every recalled car. He expressed surprise that GM would allow an open flame under the hood. “I can’t imagine a scenario where that would be acceptable.” Erik Gordon, a University of Michigan business professor, criticizes GM for seeking the cheapest, easiest repair. Valve cover gaskets are not expensive, but it takes nearly an hour’s labor to make the repair. At a labor rate of about $100 per hour, fixing 1.4 million cars would cost GM roughly $112 million, according to the AP.

In the last decade, the auto industry has been plagued by mishandled safety recalls. Deaths and injuries linked to safety defects have resulted in criminal investigations and class-action lawsuits. Automakers, including GM, have paid billions of dollars in penalties and recall costs, according to the AP. Despite improvements in industry response and more aggressive enforcement by NHTSA, problems still go undetected.

In reviewing NHTSA’s complaint data for just one car, the 2001 Grand Prix, the AP found 466 complaints of engine fires, including 33 for fires in car that had undergone the first recall repair. Complaints of fires in cars that had supposedly been repaired began more than six years ago, and it is not clear why NHTSA too so long to act. GM could be fined for not reporting the post-recall fires earlier. Automakers are required by law to report safety defects within five days of discovering them, the AP says.

 

 



from Parker Waichman http://www.yourlawyer.com/blog/general-motors-issues-new-recall-for-cars-with-engine-fire-risk/

No comments:

Post a Comment