Recall of Exploding Airbag Metal Canisters
Toyota is taking part in a massive 3-million vehicle recall of inflators that can explode and send shards of metal throughout the cabin during an airbag deployment. Takata said the propellant wafers produced at a plant in Moses Lake, Washington, between April 13, 2000 and September 11, 2002, may have been produced with an inadequate compaction force. The propellant could deteriorate over time and cause too much combustion, which could cause the body of the inflator to rupture during air bag deployment.
Toyota announced plans to recall the 2001-2003 Corolla, Matrix, Sequoia, and Tundra along with the Lexus SC 430.
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Which Toyota Vehicles Have Dangerous Takata Airbags?
Parts supplier, Takata, manufactured defective, shrapnel-hurling airbag inflators that need to be recalled. The issue affects over 37 million vehicles spread out across 24 brands, making it one of the largest (and most dangerous) recalls in
Related Toyota Generations
At least one model year in these 4 generations have a relationship to this story.
We track this because a generation is just a group of model years where very little changes from year-to-year. Chances are owners throughout these generation will want to know about this news. Click on a generation for more information.
9th Generation Corolla
- Years
- 2001–2006
- Reliability
- 76th out of 81
- PainRank™
- 23.48
- Complaints
- 476
1st Generation Matrix
- Years
- 2003–2008
- Reliability
- 60th out of 81
- PainRank™
- 9.41
- Complaints
- 119
1st Generation Sequoia
- Years
- 2001–2007
- Reliability
- 51st out of 81
- PainRank™
- 7.62
- Complaints
- 272
1st Generation Tundra
- Years
- 2000–2006
- Reliability
- 53rd out of 81
- PainRank™
- 8.03
- Complaints
- 179