Takata airbag crisis worsens: 78,000 cars off the road in Australia’s biggest automotive buy back

The Takata airbag crisis has taken its most serious turn yet, with to up 78,000 cars to be put off the road and bought back by manufacturers at an estimated cost of up to $200 million. Popular cars made by Audi, BMW, Ford, Honda, Mazda, Mitsubishi, Suzuki and Toyota – sold from 1996 to 2000 – are believed to be equipped with another type of Takata airbag inflator which can also become unstable over time and spray shrapnel when deployed in a crash.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

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

Volvo ‘ES90’ electric sedan due next year

New Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale supercar unveiled with petrol and electric power

Ineos Grenadier gets converted into a camper with Australian-made pop-top

Renault and Nissan production delays due to global cyber attack

2024 Toyota LandCruiser 70 Series facelift spy photo

2022 Land Rover Defender 110 SE D300 v 2022 Nissan Navara Pro-4X Warrior comparison

2024 Mazda 3 update due this year with technology upgrade – report

New Hyundai Venue due in 2025 – report

JAC T9 ute from China slated for 2024 Australian launch