GM Recalls 162,000 Hummers over Hood Fault

May 5, 2010
The H3 model made between 2006 and 2010 is the one affected.

Due to a flaw that could cause part of the hood to break off while the vehicle is being driven, General Motors is recalling more than 160,000 Hummers, the company said on May 5.

The problem could affect up to 162,129 Hummer H3 cars made between 2006 and 2010, according to documents from GM and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

"Some of these vehicles have a condition in which the integral clip-tabs on the hood louver may fracture," GM said. "If this indicator is unnoticed, additional clips could fracture and the hood louver could detach from the vehicle. If the vehicle is being driven when this occurs, it could strike a following vehicle and cause injury and/or property damage."

The problem can be fixed with the application of an adhesive to the louver, an air grille panel on the car, and owners of affected cars can have them fixed at local dealers.

A letter from GM to NHTSA said the issue was raised in Japan in January after three warranty claims citing hood grille detachments. The problem was communicated to GM North America, which decided on April 22 to issue a recall. The recall affected certain H3 Hummers made between 2006-2008, and certain H3 or H3T vehicles made between 2009-2010.

GM last month informed dealers of its plans to dismantle the Hummer brand after a deal to sell the unit fell through. etters went out to the 153 Hummer dealers in the United States and 247 dealers in other countries last week formally notifying them of the "dissolution of the dealership network," said GM spokesman Nick Richards.

The Detroit automaker had announced a deal to sell the brand in June, as it underwent a massive government-assisted bankruptcy restructuring. But in February, the company announced that the planned sale to China Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machines Co. had fallen through.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2010

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