Auto Makers Pinpoint Root Causes for Takata Air-Bag Ruptures
February 23 2016 - 3:00PM
Dow Jones News
A group of 10 auto makers probing the cause of rupturing Takata
Corp. air bags pointed to a volatile chemical and other factors as
the main culprits, according to findings released Tuesday.
The coalition of auto makers found ammonium nitrate lacking a
desiccant that absorbs moisture is among the root causes of Takata
air bags rupturing, a safety problem linked to 10 deaths and dozens
of injuries globally. Takata has used the chemical as a propellant
in air-bag inflaters.
The group also blamed two other factors for explosions:
prolonged exposure to high temperatures and moisture, and
manufacturing problems that failed to prevent moisture from seeping
into air-bag inflaters under those conditions. Moisture can cause
ammonium nitrate to destabilize, leading to explosions during
crashes.
Takata, auto makers and government officials for years have been
unable to pinpoint the root cause for the ruptures, which can spray
shrapnel in vehicle cabins. Still, the auto makers' findings are
broadly consistent with contributing factors that Takata and
government officials have already highlighted.
A Takata spokesman said the findings were consistent with the
company's own testing and work done on the company's behalf by a
German research firm showing that older inflaters with prolonged
exposure to heat and humidity are among the significant factors
leading to ruptures. Takata is cooperating with the auto makers'
investigation, the spokesman said.
A spokesman for the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration said the agency received and was reviewing
information about the auto makers' findings. Under the terms of a
November settlement, all of Takata's inflaters using ammonium
nitrate must eventually be recalled unless the Japanese supplier
can demonstrate their long-term safety, the NHTSA spokesman
said.
The auto makers, in the midst of unprecedented recalls of
millions of vehicles featuring the problematic air bags, said the
findings were the first in a multi-step investigation that would
also examine air bags being used as replacement parts and how they
are expected to perform.
The initial findings cover 23 million of the roughly 28 million
air-bag inflaters currently being recalled in the U.S. by a dozen
auto makers, the car companies' group said. That excludes an
additional five million inflaters recalled earlier this year.
Overall, auto makers are currently recalling more than 24
million vehicles in the U.S. on account of Takata air bags.
"Identifying this multivariate root cause is an important first
step," David Kelly, a former top U.S. car-safety regulator
coordinating the investigation for the auto makers' group, said in
a statement. He said the group would continue work toward a
comprehensive understanding of the air-bag ruptures.
The coalition includes BMW AG, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV,
Honda Motor Co, Ford Motor Co., General Motors Co., Mitsubishi
Motors Corp., Mazda Motor Corp., Nissan Motor Co., Fuji Heavy
Industries Ltd.'s Subaru and Toyota Motor Corp. The group tapped
aerospace and defense firm Orbital ATK Inc. to conduct 20,000 hours
of testing and analysis by engineers, scientists and technicians,
the car makers' coalition said.
The testing was complicated by varying inflater designs in
different vehicles but still pointed to the three-factor root cause
for air-bag ruptures, said Bob Wardle, senior director of
technology programs for Orbital ATK's propulsion systems
division.
Write to Mike Spector at mike.spector@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 23, 2016 15:45 ET (20:45 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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