BMW buybacks have started in Australia following suspected fatality involving Takata airbags

BMW is believed to be the first car company in Australia to buy back a batch of used cars affected by a recall of potentially deadly Takata airbags. Earlier this month BMW and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) issued a warning pleading with owners of 12,663 BMWs to stop driving their cars immediately following a fatality and a serious injury crash suspected of being linked to a new type of Takata airbag not previously recalled.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

JLR: Consumer confidence on the rise post-election

Teacher accused of using rented Toyota Supra for land-speed record attempt

Donald Trump’s Lamborghini Diablo sets new auction price record

2024 Toyota Yaris Cross updated in Europe with new tech, more hybrid power

Honda confirms NSX successor in the works

Europe’s vehicle emissions haven’t changed in more than a decade, say officials

Volvo ‘ES90’ electric sedan due next year

New Norweld tray revealed for popular utes

Tesla cars to be banned from Chinese government buildings amid security fears — report

How many cupholders are too many? | Drive Flashback