Driver's Death Came After Honda Sent Car Owner 15 Letters

The Takata air bag inflator exploded
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Oct 4, 2020 9:00 AM CDT
Arizona Driver Killed by Exploding Takata Air Bag Inflator
   (Getty Images)

Another person has been killed by an exploding Takata air bag inflator, bringing the worldwide death toll to at least 26. The latest death occurred Aug. 20 in Mesa, Arizona, in the crash of a 2002 Honda Civic, according to a statement released Saturday by Honda. It was the 17th death reported in the United States. Others have been reported in Malaysia and Australia. Takata used volatile ammonium nitrate to create a small explosion to inflate air bags in a crash. But the chemical can deteriorate over time when exposed to moisture in the air. The explosion can blow apart a metal canister and hurl shrapnel into the passenger compartment. Honda said in a statement that it inspected the Civic in the Mesa crash on Wednesday, along with the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, and determined that the inflators in both the driver and passenger air bags had ruptured.

Honda said the Civic was recalled in December 2011 for the driver’s side inflator and in November of 2014 for the passenger side. The company said it mailed more than 15 notices to the owners over eight years, but the free repairs were never done. The company said it also made numerous phone calls and even visited the current registered owner’s home and left recall information. The driver who was killed was not the registered owner of the car, Honda said. The company would not release further information about the driver. The AP reports the problem caused the largest series of auto recalls in US history, with at least 63 million inflators recalled. The US government says that as of September, more than 11.1 million had not been fixed.

(More Takata stories.)

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