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Ford must recall 3 million cars with Takata airbags, NHTSA rules

The government body rejected a petition from Ford that argued the inflators are safe for motorists.

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NHTSA says the inflators remain a risk.

Ford

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on Wednesday rejected a petition from Ford, forcing the automaker to recall 3 million vehicles with Takata airbag inflators. Ford previously argued, much like General Motors, that the particular inflators did not pose the same risk as millions of other inflators involved in so many other recalls.

NHTSA said it reviewed information Ford submitted and concluded the particular Takata inflators do show signs of "propellant degradation and potential future rupture risk." Takata airbag inflators, as has been well documented over the last several years, deteriorate under heat and humidity. When the airbag deploys, the inflators may explode and spew shrapnel at passengers. The defect is responsible for 27 deaths worldwide and many more injuries. Takata has filed for bankruptcy and been absorbed by a Chinese supplier.

Ford did not immediately return Roadshow's request for comment on the government's decision.

The specific vehicles that will be included in the recall come from the 2006-2012 model years, specifically, the Ford Ranger, Fusion, Lincoln Zephyr/MKZ, MKX and the Mercury Milan. Ford has 30 days to submit its plans to NHTSA to conduct the recall.

NHTSA urged owners who receive a notice from Ford in the near future to perform the free repair as soon as possible to limit the risk of the faulty inflators.