Recalls
Porsche won't contest diesel negligence fine
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By Tom White · 08 May 2019
Porsche has confirmed it will not contest a AU$853.9 million (535 million euros) fine laid down by German prosecutors overnight for its role in the VW Group diesel cheating saga.
Tropical Polos and popular Triton recalled
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By Tom White · 07 May 2019
Volkswagen issues recall for potentially explosive airbag, while Mitsubishi rectifies defective side-steps.
Honda airbag recall 95 per cent complete
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By Jake Williams · 14 Mar 2019
Honda Australia says 95 per cent of faulty Takata airbags have been replaced locally, but that more than 40,000 vehicles are still out there with potentially deadly airbags fitted.The completion high rate to date is undoubtedly a positive result, but Honda Australia director Stephen Collins said there’s much more to do to achieve the brand’s 100 per cent success rate goal. “The biggest challenge for us so far has been customer response,” he said. “We know the VIN numbers of the cars that are yet to be replaced, and have been actively trying to contact the owners so that they can get their airbags replaced free of charge. The faulty items are already responsible for one death and dozens of injuries in Australia. “We door-knocked every single person that was affected by the airbag recall, and that got a 30 or so per cent positive response. “Of those door-knocks, 70 per cent we found the car, and of that 70 per cent a third of owners booked their car in, a third said they understood but didn’t want to complete the recall, and the other third gave many excuses as to why they didn’t want to, including that they were busy, that nobody sits on that side of the car or that Honda was trying to sell them another car.“There is still 43,531 vehicles left to have their airbags replaced,” Mr Collins said.At the peak of the recall, Honda was replacing about 8500 airbags each week, but now is down to roughly 300 per week thanks to the reach of the campaign so far.Honda has again called for the Victorian Government to join every other state in Australia in banning registration for owners who are yet to have their faulty airbags replaced. Honda is still attempting to locate 34,000 airbag inflators in 26,000 cars, and 4200 of those have the highest risk 'Alpha' type, which - according to Honda Australia - has a 50:50 chance of death upon deployment.“It’s extremely disappointing,” said Mr Collins.“NSW has the most outstanding faulty airbags by a long way, but Victoria still has many to be replaced as well, and it’s a relatively simple measure that is not difficult to implement. There’s too much talking going on and not enough action.”Despite not reaching a 100 per cent success rate yet, Honda Australia is committed to completing the task. Because the airbags can still kill without a car even being switched on, the car industry has employed an outside firm to recover faulty airbags from junked cars in wrecking yards.“As part of the recall, we as an industry have a company who has a team of people searching through wrecking yards finding used airbags, taking them out of the system,” Mr Collins said. “At the end of the day our focus still remains to try and get them done. That’s our total focus.”If you’re not up to speed on the Takata airbag scandal, manufacturers including Honda, Toyota, BMW and Subaru are recalling millions of cars worldwide because potentially deadly airbag inflators made by Japanese company Takata were fitted to cars from as far back as 2002. This is the serious part: there have been multiple injuries and even deaths because of the faulty airbags. A Honda technician in the US died changing a faulty unit while a car was switched off. Despite the replacement being free of charge, there are still thousands of cars on our roads that are yet to have their airbags changed. If you are yet to have your airbags replaced, you are putting yourself and others in danger.
Subaru Australia recalls over 121,000 vehicles
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By Andrew Chesterton · 04 Mar 2019
Subaru has launched a major 121,754-vehicle recall to fix a potential fault which can cause the brake lights to fail (though the brakes themselves will still work), with every Forester, WRX, Impreza and XV sold over a particular timeframe impacted.
Insurers could deny coverage for killer Takata airbags
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By Andrew Chesterton · 27 Feb 2019
A product comparison site has claimed some car insurers will deny coverage to recalled vehicles fitted with deadly Takata airbags
Can we get Takata airbags replaced sooner?
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By Graham Smith · 08 Feb 2019
We are part of the group that is urgently trying to get the Takata airbags replaced and we keep getting told it is safe to drive until the scheduled date of replacement – Aug 2019. Is there anything we could do to get it replaced sooner?
Subaru's $100m plant shutdown
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By Andrew Chesterton · 24 Jan 2019
If you've got a Subaru on backorder, be prepared to wait a little longer. Because one of the Japanese brand's two global production facilities has been frozen after a suspected faulty in a power-steering part was discovered.
Toyota DPF problem could see company in court
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By Matt Campbell · 20 Dec 2018
Toyota Australia could soon find itself in court after news that legal firm Bannister Law is looking into a potential class action suit against the company over diesel particulate filter problems.
New Corolla recalled to replace gearbox
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By Andrew Chesterton · 20 Dec 2018
The all-new Toyota Corolla hatchback is the subject of a significant recall following the discovery of a serious issue with the car's CVT that can cause a sudden power loss.
Airbag mishap clips Hyundai safety score
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By Ron Hammerton · 06 Dec 2018
An airbag mishap during crash tests triggered a safety recall by Hyundai for its new Santa Fe SUV, but still scored a five star ANCAP safety rating.