Toyota to Recall 136,000 Cars Over Steering Fault

Nov. 4, 2010
Recall is in Japan and Europe

Toyota on Nov. 5 announced a recall of almost 136,000 compact cars in Japan and Europe to fix a steering problem, the latest in a series of issues that have tarnished its once-stellar reputation.

The world's largest automaker, which was battered by a global safety crisis earlier this year, said it will recall 65,000 compact iQ and Passo cars in Japan and about 70,800 in Europe, all of them built between 2008 and 2010.

The recall was made after it was found that power steering sensors could malfunction when driving over bumps, making steering more heavy, a spokesman said, adding there had been no reports of accidents related to the issue.

The company said it would fix the necessary software on all cars.

Last month Toyota announced a global safety recall of about 1.5 million vehicles to fix a brake fluid leak that it warned can gradually diminish braking performance.

Analysts say Toyota has become more aggressive in catching possible defects as part of a campaign to improve its consumer image, but warn that continued frequent recalls continue to damage its branding as a quality carmaker.

Toyota in October said it had completed more than five million repairs on US vehicles affected by the series of recalls. The automaker said about 80% of the 2.3 million U.S. vehicles affected by the accelerator defect had been repaired while 86% of the 148,000 Prius and Lexus vehicles recalled for braking problems had also been fixed.

However, the fall-out from the crisis continues to affect the company. Lawyers of clients suing the automaker in the U.S. said last month that Toyota secretly bought back some of the faulty vehicles it sold on the market in a bid to hide their defects from the public.

It has also been alleged that Toyota deliberately withheld information about claims its cars were prone to unintended acceleration from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and from its testimony at congressional hearings.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2010

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