Nissan is recalling 1 million vehicles because the air bag system
software might not be able to tell whether there is a person sitting in
the front passenger seat, so the air bag might not inflate in a crash.
It's
the second passenger air bag recall for some of the vehicles. Last
April, 82,038 2013-model vehicles from the same group were recalled
because a sensor was improperly manufactured and might prevent the
passenger bag from working in a crash.
Nissan noted in documents
on file with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that
there have been accidents, but no injuries or deaths were specified.
The
recent action involves what's called the occupant classification
system, which judges whether anyone is sitting in the passenger's seat
in order to decide whether to inflate the bag if there is a crash.
Nissan
documents say the system might not work if there is "high engine
vibration at idle when the seat is initially empty and then becomes
occupied, or unusual occupant seating postures immediately upon being
seated."
Dealers will reprogram the system at no charge.
The latest action involves 989,701 Nissan and Infiniti brand vehicles, including some of the automaker's best sellers:
- 2013-2014 Nissan Altima (544,139)
- 2013-2014 Leaf electric (29,165)
- 2013-2014 Nissan Pathfinder (124,202)
- 2013-2014 Nissan Sentra (182,569)
- 2013 NV200/Taxi (6,696)
- 2013 Infiniti JX35/ 2014 QX60 (63,698)
- 2014 Infiniti Q50 (unspecified)
Nissan
provided a detailed chronology indicating that it has been
investigating reports of the problem since last spring, conducted a
recall for a different problem then, but continued to see warranty
claims. It began investigating anew last August, is aware of two
incidents and has determined the latest issue as software requiring a
recall.