DETROIT (AP) — Under pressure from U.S. safety regulators, Ford is recalling about 2 million F-150 pickup trucks in North America because the seat belts can spark and cause fires.
The recall, which covers
trucks from the 2015 through 2018 model years, comes about one month
after the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration began
investigating fires in the pickups, which are the top-selling vehicles
in the United States.
Ford said
Thursday that it has 23 reports of smoke or fire in U.S. and Canadian
trucks, but it's not aware of any injuries. NHTSA began investigating in
early August after getting five fire reports, including three reports
that trucks were destroyed.
According to Ford, seat belt
pretensioners can generate excessive sparks when they tighten before a
crash. That can ignite gases inside a support pillar between the front
and rear seats, causing insulation and carpet to catch fire. The Regular
Cab and SuperCrew Cab trucks were built between March 12, 2014 and Aug.
23, 2018, according to documents posted Thursday by NHTSA.
The
seat belt pretensioners were made by ZF-TRW and now-defunct air bag and
seat belt maker Takata, which was purchased by Joyson, another auto
parts supplier.
Dealers will
remove insulation and install heat-resistant tape to repair the trucks.
They also will remove remnants of wiring tape and modify interior panels
in Regular Cab trucks. Owners will be notified starting Sept. 24.
In one of the complaints filed with the U.S. government, an owner in Grand Rapids, Michigan, told NHTSA that on July 7, a deer ran into the driver's side of a pickup, causing minor damage. The side air bags inflated, and after five to 10 minutes, a passenger noticed a fire on the bottom of the post between the front and rear doors where the seat belts are located. "The truck went up in complete flames in a matter of minutes and is a complete loss," the owner wrote.
In one of the complaints filed with the U.S. government, an owner in Grand Rapids, Michigan, told NHTSA that on July 7, a deer ran into the driver's side of a pickup, causing minor damage. The side air bags inflated, and after five to 10 minutes, a passenger noticed a fire on the bottom of the post between the front and rear doors where the seat belts are located. "The truck went up in complete flames in a matter of minutes and is a complete loss," the owner wrote.
People who file complaints are not identified in the NHTSA database.
Ford
said in a filing Thursday with U.S. securities regulators that the
recall will cost about $140 million and will be counted in third-quarter
results.
The company maintained its full-year adjusted earnings-per-share guidance of $1.30 to $1.50.
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