A   A   A

Posted: Wednesday, 30 January 2013 4:36AM

Toyota to recall 1 million vehicles for airbag, wiper glitches



TOKYO (Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp will recall nearly 1.3 million cars globally for two separate defects, including 752,000 Corolla and Corolla Matrix vehicles in the United States to fix airbags that could be deployed inadvertently, the automaker said on Wednesday.

It is the third Toyota recall since October to involve more than a million cars, and it comes as the company tries to recover from a damaged reputation following a series of recalls between 2009 and 2011 that were related to unintended acceleration problems.

An IC chip in the airbag control unit can malfunction when it receives electrical interference from other parts in the car, causing the airbags to deploy when it is not necessary, Toyota spokesman Naoto Fuse said.

Toyota is also recalling certain Corolla and Corolla Matrix vehicles in Japan, Canada, and Mexico.

The problem has caused minor injuries such as abrasions in 18 cases that have been reported, he said. Two accidents have been reported by customers outside Japan, although Toyota has not been able to confirm them, he said.

Toyota will add an electrical signal filter to the airbag control module to the recalled vehicles -- repairs expected to take an hour to hour-and-a-half, he said.

The spokesman declined to disclose the costs involved.

LIMITED FINANCIAL IMPACT

TRW Automotive Holding Corp has manufactured the airbag control unit in the vehicles, although the problematic chip is supplied by another company, an employee at TRW's Toyota office told Reuters.

He declined to say where TRW buys the chips from.

The financial impact from the airbag recall is likely to be limited, possibly costing Toyota about 5 billion yen ($55 million), said Koichi Sugimoto, a senior analyst at BNP Paribas in Tokyo.

Toyota may ask suppliers to compensate, he added.

"While this cannot be ignored, this amount is not going to dent Toyota's operations and share prices are unlikely to be impacted much," he said.

Separately, Toyota will also recall 385,000 Lexus IS and its series, including 270,000 Lexus IS vehicles in the United States over wiper problems, Toyota spokesman Fuse said.

The wiper arm nut of the front wiper in these vehicles may not be tight enough and the wiper may not work under certain weather occasions, including in snow.

Toyota will exchange the nut in repairs that will take about 30 minutes, Fuse said.

Toyota has been showing signs of recovery from the recall crisis and won back the crown as the world's top selling automaker in 2012 from General Motors.

In an effort to move past its safety crisis, Toyota proposed last month and got approval from a judge to spend $1.1 billion to settle one of the biggest U.S. auto class-action lawsuits over claims that millions of its vehicles accelerated unintentionally.

Toyota has not admitted fault in proposing the settlement.

As automakers including Toyota increasingly use shared parts for various models, the number of recalled vehicles have tended to balloon.

In October, the automaker also recalled 7.4 million vehicles globally to fix malfunctioning power window switches, and in November it recalled 2.8 million vehicles for a steering glitch.

Toyota is set to announce its October-December earnings results on February 5.

Story & Photos Copyright 2012 Reuters
Filed Under :  
Topics : Business_Finance
Social :
Locations : Tokyo
People : Koichi SugimotoNaoto Fuse

WATCH: Woman finds missing dog alive in rubble


Touching video. A woman whose home was destroyed finds her dog alive.

Yahoo buying Tumblr for $1.1 billion


Yahoo said it is buying blogging service Tumblr for $1.1 billion cash.

Winning $590.5 million Powerball lottery ticket sold in Florida


A single winning ticket for a record Powerball lottery jackpot was sold in Florida.

VIDEO: Meteoroid impact triggers bright flash on the moon


An automated telescope monitoring the moon captured images of a meteoroid impact. Watch!

National Weather Service gets big computing boost


The National Weather Service is getting a boost that will significantly improve its forecasting abilities.

Google+ struggles to attract brands


Businesses don't seem to be catching on to Google+.

Lower DUI limit to 0.05% blood-alcohol level, NTSB says


The top transportation safety agency voted to recommend a lower blood alcohol limit for drivers.

ABC to start first streaming of live broadcast shows


Disney's ABC network will become the first broadcast network to stream its shows live online.

Modern Etiquette: When a colleague is abusing alcohol


The lovely dinner meeting with my colleague turned out to be a bad dream.

Colorado legislature votes to tax recreational marijuana


The Colorado legislature passed a bill to establish the first tax ever collected on marijuana.

Video game maker drops gun makers, not their guns


Gun manufacturers and videogame makers are delicately navigating their relationships.

Senate passes internet tax bill; fight expected in House


The Senate voted overwhelmingly to give states the power to enforce their sales tax laws online.

They're back: 17-year cicadas to swarm


Colossal numbers of cicadas, unhurriedly growing underground since 1996, are about to emerge.

Starving Jamestown settlers turned to cannibalism in 1609: study


New evidence has revealed Jamestown settlers resorted to cannibalism to survive the harsh winter of 1609.

FDA approves Plan B for girls as young as 15


The USDA said it would allow a morning after pill to be sold to girls as young as 15 years old.