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Regulators aim to recall 52M airbags for auto safety.

A deployed airbag is seen in a Chrysler vehicle at the LKQ⁤ Pick ‌Your Part salvage yard on May ⁣22, 2015 in Medley, Florida. The largest automotive recall‍ in history centers​ around the defective Takata ‌Corp. ⁢air bags that are found in millions of vehicles ​that⁢ are ‍manufactured by BMW,​ Chrysler, Daimler Trucks, Ford, General Motors, Honda, Mazda, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Subaru and ‍Toyota.⁢ (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty ‌Images)

OAN’s Elizabeth Volberding
5:00 PM – Tuesday, September 5, 2023

On⁤ Tuesday, federal auto safety regulators stated that nearly ⁤52 million airbag systems manufactured by ARC Automotive Inc. and Delphi Automotive could be‌ dangerous ‌to drivers and should be ⁢recalled after the parts caused two deaths​ that should have been prevented.

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The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) officially announced that airbag inflators from ARC and Delphi are defective after an eight-year examination, which is the first ​step in the agency’s course of action‌ in forcing both companies to recall ⁢the auto parts.

Two people‍ have been ⁤killed,⁣ one in the United ‌States ‌and another in Canada, by ARC‍ inflator explosions, according to the ⁣NHTSA.

The American victim was ⁢Marlene Beaudoin, 40, from Michigan. Beaudoin ​was struck by metal pieces when her 2015⁣ Chevrolet Traverse SUV was involved in a minor crash that took ⁢her life ⁤in 2021.

The agency also stated that ⁤there have been seven additional non-fatal ​injuries due ⁢to the airbag inflators.

According to NHTSA data, ⁣the ⁢problematic air bag systems are installed in automobiles made by Ford, GM, Stellantis, Tesla, Toyota, and Volkswagen from models made in 2000 to 2018.

“These airbag inflators may rupture when the vehicle’s air bag is ⁣commanded to ‌deploy, causing metal debris ⁢to be ​forcefully ‍ejected into the passenger compartment of the vehicle,” the agency wrote in an initial decision document. “A rupturing air bag inflator poses an unreasonable risk of serious injury or death to vehicle occupants.”

NHTSA ‍investigators claimed that the issue was generated by the inflators due⁣ to a “welding problem” by ARC and Delphi.

They expressed that ⁣employees working at both businesses potentially ⁢created a ⁤“weld slag” throughout​ the manufacturing process, which is‍ the cause of clogged vents inside the⁣ inflator canister. With​ the⁣ airbags supposedly being defective, the pressure can grow to the point ‌where the canister is blown apart.

In May, NHTSA allegedly requested ARC to recall their airbag ​inflators, however, the company declined.

Additionally, ARC ‍denied the speculation that its products‍ are defective‍ and mentioned that any issues regarding the airbags result “from ‍random ‘one-off’ manufacturing anomalies that were properly addressed” with single recalls.

“Air bag inflators that project metal fragments into vehicle occupants, rather than properly inflating ⁤the attached air bag, create ‍an unreasonable risk of death and injury,” Stephen Ridella, director of NHTSA’s Office of Defects⁢ Investigation, explained in a letter to ⁣ARC.

However,‌ ARC maintains that there are ⁢no safety⁢ flaws, that the ⁢NHTSA lacks the jurisdiction to require a component manufacturer⁤ to issue recalls, and that the agency’s demand ⁢is rooted in speculation rather than technical findings.

“An airbag inflator that fails by rupture not only‍ does not ⁣perform its job as a safety device, but instead actively threatens injury or death, even in a crash where the vehicle occupants would⁢ otherwise have been​ unharmed,” the NHTSA announced.

The ‌agency wishes for ARC ⁤to recall at least twelve different automakers’ inflators used in driver and passenger front ⁢air bags. ⁢

A comprehensive‍ list of vehicle models with the ‍kind of airbag inflators‍ that⁢ have exploded has not been made public by either ARC or⁢ the car industry.​ However, it ​is estimated that at least 25 million⁣ of the 284 million automobiles on American roads and highways are believed to contain⁣ them.

NHTSA officials scheduled a ‌public hearing ⁢for October 5th and will later have the ability to seek a court-ordered recall.

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