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CASES & INVESTIGATIONS |
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GENERAL INFORMATION |
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| August 15, 2005 |
WFMY News (Greensboro,
NC), "Ford Trucks Catch Fire, Not Attention;
Laura Voos saved the house but not the truck" |
Owners
of thousands of Ford light trucks have a bigger
concern than high fuel prices, their vehicles
could catch fire. Even though they've been warned
and offered a repair, CBS News reports that some
of the owners are not doing anything about it.
Laura Voos says her Ford
pickup was parked and locked last week when it suddenly burst into flames in
her Texas driveway.
"It was already getting
the eaves on the garage when I came out," said Voos of the fire.
She managed to save the
house but not the truck, which is now a burned mass of metal. More than 400 Ford
vehicles have caught fire since 2000 and at least three people have died.
Ford identified the culprit
in some of the fires as the cruise control switch. In February, they began recalling
800,000 pickups, Expeditions and Navigators.
The big question for federal
safety investigators is whether millions more Ford vehicles that used similar
switches all the way up until 2003 should also be recalled.
A Ford test video, turned
over as evidence for a lawsuit, shows how a switch can catch fire. But Ford says
it's still not sure what's behind the problem with the recalled switches.
Replacing the switch in
recalled vehicles is fairly easy. But to complicate matters, federal investigators
say the switches might be only part of the problem.
Meantime, less than half
of affected owners have had their switch replaced, even though Ford has sent
several recall letters, approved by the government.
The former head of federal
highway safety, Joan Claybrook, says Ford's recall letters don't sound urgent
enough. She used to require much stronger wording.
"It should have in
the title and as a headline on the letter itself: safety recall, recall notice,
high risk, or danger," Claybrook said.
Ford says that kind of
language might scare consumers too much. But the absence of such wording might
be why Laura Voos didn't feel the need to rush down and get her truck fixed when
she got a recall reminder, just a week before the fire. |
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