U.S. upgrades probe into 1.33 million
Ford Explorers over exhaust odors
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[July 28, 2017]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration is upgrading and expanding a probe
into 1.33 million Ford Explorer SUVs over reports of exhaust odors in
vehicle compartments and exposure to carbon monoxide that may be linked
to crashes and injuries.
The auto safety agency said in a statement on Thursday it was aware of
more than 2,700 complaints and three crashes that may be linked to
exposure to carbon monoxide and 41 injuries among police and civilian
vehicles in the probe covering 2011-2017 model year Ford Explorer sport
utility vehicles.
Ford has issued multiple technical service bulletins related to the
exhaust odor issue to address complaints from police fleets and other
owners, NHTSA said.
Ford said in a statement a dedicated company team is working with
police, NHTSA and others "to investigate reported issues and solve
them."
The probe was opened in 2016 into 638,000 vehicles and upgraded on
Thursday to an engineering analysis, a step before the agency can
formally demand an automaker conduct a recall if it believes vehicles
pose an unreasonable risk to safety.
NHTSA said it "is actively working with law enforcement agencies that
use these vehicles to determine if this issue is related to a potential
safety defect."
The agency said it had "no substantive data or actual evidence," such as
a blood test "supporting a claim that any of the alleged injury or crash
allegations were the result of carbon monoxide poisoning."
But NHTSA has obtained preliminary testing that suggests carbon monoxide
levels may be elevated in certain driving scenarios, "although the
significance and effect of those levels remains under evaluation."
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The 2016 Ford Explorer is shown during the model's world debut at
the Los Angeles Auto Show in Los Angeles, California November 19,
2014. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
The agency said it was examining vehicles used by the Austin, Texas,
police department and "using professional grade detectors to
monitors carbon monoxide under different driving scenarios."
KXAN-TV in Austin reported this month that Austin police had pulled
40 Explorers from service and more than a half dozen officers became
ill after reporting exposure to carbon monoxide.
NHTSA has conducted field inspections of vehicles and crashes
involving police units that occurred while the officers were on
duty.
NHTSA also said it recently learned that the Police Interceptor
version of the Ford Explorer was experiencing exhaust manifold
cracks, "which appear to present a low level of detectability, and
may explain the exhaust odor."
The agency said the reported injuries include "loss of
consciousness, with the majority indicating nausea, headaches, or
light-headedness."
Police have reported two crashes that may be linked to carbon
monoxide exposure, including a rollover incident, and a third
incident involving injuries related to carbon monoxide exposure.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Peter Cooney and Richard
Pullin)
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