NHTSA Investigation
EA15001
Air Bag Inflator Rupture
Key Takeaways
- Investigation EA15001 currently maps to 59 tracked vehicle-year pages across 3 makes.
- This page summarizes the public investigation subject, status, timing, and affected tracked vehicles linked from NHTSA source data.
- The linked component on this record is air bags.
- This investigation record also references recall campaign 14V668.
What This Investigation Page Shows
This page summarizes a public NHTSA investigation record tied to one or more tracked vehicle-year pages in our database. Investigation records sit between owner complaints and recall campaigns: they can remain open, close without a recall, or connect to a later remedy action. Use this page to see which tracked vehicles are linked to the record, then open the individual vehicle pages for complaints, recalls, and crash test context.
Investigation Summary
The Office of Defects Investigation (ODI) opened PE14-016 in June 2014 based on six inflator rupture incidents involving consumer owned vehicles produced by five vehicle manufacturers.All six vehicles were operated in Florida or Puerto Rico at the time of the rupture and for the majority of their service life, and were equipped with inflators produced by Takata, a tier-one supplier of automotive air bag systems.During the course of PE14-016, ODI determined that five additional vehicle manufacturers used inflators of a similar design and vintage also supplied by Takata. No evidence of field failures was found in vehicles produced by these five additional manufacturers.Nonetheless, at ODI's insistence, all 10 vehicle manufacturers initiated a regional recall within approximately two weeks of the opening of the investigation.The regions recalled initially included Florida, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, areas with high absolute humidity and climatic conditions believed to be a significant factor in the inflator ruptures.As part of the recall actions, inflators removed from remedied vehicles are to be returned to Takata for testing.Takata's initial test results on passenger inflators from remedied vehicles indicated a much higher than anticipated rupture frequency for inflators returned from Florida.Accordingly ODI requested all 10 manufacturers expand the regional recalls for passenger inflators to include other geographic areas where high absolute humidity conditions exist, including the Gulf States and other coastal areas.Takata's testing of the passenger inflators to date continues to indicate this geographic area as having the highest risk, with no ruptures occurring from inflators returned from outside the expanded recall regions.During PE14-016 four additional passenger inflator field events occurred, all in vehicles from the same expanded geographic region.Also during PE14-016 four additional driver inflator field events occurred including two in vehicles from regions not known for high absolute humidity, specifically California and North Carolina.Accordingly, ODI requested all five of the affected vehicle manufacturers currently using the subject Takata driver inflators expand to nationwide recalls.Significantly, neither of the affected vehicle manufacturers or Takata provided any explanation to account for these two driver air bag inflator ruptures outside the area of high absolute humidity.Takata testing of returned driver inflators indicates a lower rupture frequency as compared to passenger inflator testing.All test ruptures reported by Takata to date have occurred on inflators returned from high absolute humidity areas.The investigation now includes all manufacturers and vehicles known to be affected at this time.ODI's investigation will focus on, among other things, root cause analysis, other potential defect consequences, identification of affected vehicles scope, and adequacy of the remedy.The five ODI reports cited above can be reviewed online at http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/owners/SearchNHTSAID under the following identification numbers: 10537899, 10568848, 10585224, 10605877, 10651492
Manufacturer listed on the source record: Ford Motor Company
Component listed on the source record: AIR BAGS
Affected Vehicles (59)
| Year | Make | Model |
|---|---|---|
| 2005 | Ford | GT |
| 2006 | Ford | GT |
| 2005 | Ford | Mustang |
| 2006 | Ford | Mustang |
| 2007 | Ford | Mustang |
| 2008 | Ford | Mustang |
| 2004 | Ford | Ranger |
| 2005 | Ford | Ranger |
| 2001 | Honda | Accord |
| 2002 | Honda | Accord |
| 2003 | Honda | Accord |
| 2004 | Honda | Accord |
| 2005 | Honda | Accord |
| 2006 | Honda | Accord |
| 2007 | Honda | Accord |
| 2001 | Honda | Civic |
| 2002 | Honda | Civic |
| 2003 | Honda | Civic |
| 2004 | Honda | Civic |
| 2005 | Honda | Civic |
| 2003 | Honda | Civic Hybrid |
| 2004 | Honda | Civic Hybrid |
| 2005 | Honda | Civic Hybrid |
| 2002 | Honda | CR-V |
| 2003 | Honda | CR-V |
| 2004 | Honda | CR-V |
| 2005 | Honda | CR-V |
| 2006 | Honda | CR-V |
| 2003 | Honda | Element |
| 2004 | Honda | Element |
| 2005 | Honda | Element |
| 2006 | Honda | Element |
| 2007 | Honda | Element |
| 2008 | Honda | Element |
| 2009 | Honda | Element |
| 2010 | Honda | Element |
| 2011 | Honda | Element |
| 2002 | Honda | Odyssey |
| 2003 | Honda | Odyssey |
| 2004 | Honda | Odyssey |
| 2003 | Honda | Pilot |
| 2004 | Honda | Pilot |
| 2005 | Honda | Pilot |
| 2006 | Honda | Pilot |
| 2007 | Honda | Pilot |
| 2006 | Honda | Ridgeline |
| 2003 | Toyota | Corolla |
| 2004 | Toyota | Corolla |
| 2005 | Toyota | Corolla |
| 2003 | Toyota | Matrix |
| 2004 | Toyota | Matrix |
| 2005 | Toyota | Matrix |
| 2002 | Toyota | Sequoia |
| 2003 | Toyota | Sequoia |
| 2004 | Toyota | Sequoia |
| 2005 | Toyota | Sequoia |
| 2003 | Toyota | Tundra |
| 2004 | Toyota | Tundra |
| 2005 | Toyota | Tundra |
Browse Affected Vehicles
Affected Models
All data is sourced from NHTSA public records. This site is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or operated by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration or any government agency. Complaints are unverified consumer reports submitted to NHTSA and may not reflect confirmed defects. For official information, visit nhtsa.gov.
Data synced from NHTSA on May 4, 2026