Chinese Tire Recall

MeraBoy

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Massive recall of China's light truck tires without sufficient "gum strip" in US.



Tires Become Latest Chinese Product to Threaten Consumers

Fatal Crash Prompts Distributor to Press for Chinese Tire Recall

PHILADELPHIA -- A death and injury lawsuit has prompted a U.S. tire importer and distributor to ask the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for help in recalling nearly half a million Chinese-made light truck tires.

In June, Foreign Tire Sales appealed to NHTSA for aid in recalling an estimated 450,000 light truck tires sold under the names Westlake, Telluride, Compass and YKS after the company allegedly learned that the manufacturer, the Hangzhou Zhongce Rubber Company, had left a critical component out of the tire.

But the number of defective tires could be much higher, FTS told NHTSA, because Hangzhou has refused to specifically identify by Tire Identification Number, which tires are missing or were built with an insufficient gum strip - - a feature that helps to keep the tire belts from separating.

The Hangzhou tires join tainted pet food, lead-coated children's toys and toxic toothpaste as some of the latest Chinese imports deemed hazardous to American consumers. According to the New York Times, Chinese products now account for 60 percent of all product recalls today.

"This is a prime example of a private lawsuit with a substantial public benefit," said Jeffrey B. Killino, an attorney with Woloshin & Killino, which represents the families of the deceased and injured. "There are nearly half a million of these substandard tires out there, unbeknownst to consumers. The Hangzhou Rubber Company deliberately and secretly removed a safety feature from these tires and two young men died as a direct result. This was a tragedy that didn't have to happen, but hopefully we can prevent future fatal crashes."

According to a report FTS filed with NHTSA, the company suspected that something was wrong with the tires in October 2005, when it noticed a sharp increase in the number of warranty adjustments on the tires, but Hangzhou officials assured them that the tires were sound. The company confirmed its suspicions in May 2006, after an ambulance crash in New Mexico prompted FTS to examine the blown tire that caused the rollover. The company found that the Chinese manufacturer had failed to include the 0.6 mm gum strip between the belts to keep them from separating. FTS stopped buying tires from Hangzhou in June 2006, the report said.

On August 12, 2006, Rafael B. Melo, Claudeir Jose Figueiredo and Carlos Souza, were passengers in a 2000 Chevrolet Express 2500 Cargo Van, bearing a Compass Telluride steel belted radial made in China in 2004. The van was traveling south on Pennsylvania Route 476, when the tire experienced a tread / belt separation causing the van driver to lose control. The vehicle rolled over and the three passengers were ejected. Melo and Figueiredo died in the crash. Souza suffered a permanent brain injury. The driver, who remained in the vehicle, suffered less severe injuries.

The families of three passengers sued FTS on May 4. The van driver also filed suit. The Melo, Figueiredo, and Souza lawsuit filed by Killino prompted FTS to file an $80 million lawsuit against the Hangzhou Rubber Company and notify NHTSA of the defect.

According to Foreign Tire Sales report to NHTSA, it contracted the Hangzhou Rubber Company in 2000 to design and manufacture light truck tires that FTS, of Union, N.J., would import and sell. Hangzhou worked with FTS engineers to ensure that the tires could meet all federal safety standards. At a May 2002 meeting, FTS stressed the importance of tire safety, informing the Chinese manufacturer that light truck tires had been the focus of many recalls and were under government scrutiny. FTS urged Hangzhou to produce tires with nylon cap plies to increase their endurance.

Initially, the tires passed endurance tests, the report said. But once the warranty claims rose in 2005, FTS began conducting its own tests. A visual analysis revealed that some tires seemed to have an insufficient or missing gum strip -- a key safety feature to preserve the integrity of the belts. After the May crash, FTS said it removed tires from other ambulances and found insufficient or missing gum strips on tires manufactured in 2004 and 2005. In September 2006, Hangzhou finally admitted to FTS that it had reduced or omitted the gum strip from an unspecified number of tires FTS alleges. But Hangzhou officials told FTS that in January 2006, it began to reintroduce some amount of the gum strip back into the tires. In March 2007, FTS did further testing and analysis on Hangzhou tires and found that they experienced tread / belt separations at 25,000 miles.

"These tires could pose an immediate danger to consumers and should be removed," said Sean E. Kane, president of Safety Research & Strategies, a safety advocacy and consulting firm that has been pushing for tougher tire safety standards. "Unfortunately, we saw during the Ford Explorer-Firestone tire scandal how deadly a defective tire can be -- especially if it is paired with a light truck. It is important that consumers are notified immediately, retailers and wholesalers stop selling them, and they are removed from vehicles until we get some answers."

This is not a definitive list, but consumers should be on the lookout for steel-belted radial light truck tires sold under the names Westlake, Telluride, Compass and YKS in the following sizes:

-- LT235/75R-15
-- LT225/75R-16
-- LT235/85R-16
-- LT245/75R-16
-- LT265/75R-16
-- LT3X10.5-15

These tires were sold by the following distributors:

-- Tireco, Compton, California
-- Strategic Import Supply, Wayzata, Minnesota
-- Omni United USA, Inc., Jacksonville, Florida
-- Orteck International, Inc. of Gaithersburg, Maryland
-- K&D Tire Wholesalers LLC, Carlsbad, California
-- Robinson Tire in Laurel, Mississippi.

Source: Safety Research & Strategies, Inc.
Source:
Tires Become Latest Chinese Product to Threaten Consumers
 

Vagabond

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so it's worth it to purchase tyres from a reputable brand.

let's take it as a lesson.
 

FVel

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Meraboy also posted recently on the Chinese car that failed the European crash tests.

Would you buy a Cherry ? hehehe
 

MeraBoy

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Would you buy a Cherry ? hehehe
...for me or any one else, i would NOT suggest them to get a china make @ design vehicle up to say 5 years down the road.

Look at Korean car, Kia Carnival/Sedona=Rio, it's only 2-star rating in Euro NCAP, unless the 2006 Carnival (4-star).



Even C-class 1997 also only 2-star:


at least, i feel better with my car & worthy: :proud:


Not even a single China car maker listed in Euro NCAP, as well as Perodua.

Everything comes with a price !!!
 

Doink

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why still buy from china...cheap means less safety...if u can live with it then it is ok...sorry i dont buy china products...hell yeah!!!!chinese in malaysia dont support china ppl...
 

ae101rulez

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ya, true...its kinda dangerous...cos i have personally went to china and seen all their stuff...kinda scary to know that its not even safe to eat the food down there unless you are super sure of its ingredients...cos my aunt down there told me, stupid food sellers will put in any stuff to make their food attractive and more tasty without regard of health..X(.....
 

zephyr3d

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like the article said, not just the tires and food... to be honest, alot of things coming fr china are substandard. Itz the mentality that they have wit em. Seriously, although i give them credits for the capability and technology.. but i really have to darn their QC and greed...

thy're always finding way to earn more by reducing... if only they change their thoughts, i'm sure china will be the next rising giant... until now, they are not going anywhere.
 

MeraBoy

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How sure u all dun use china products ?
As a world factory, definitely there r certain parts in almost every products r made in china, eg : computer, digital camera, toys, TV etc. All these products r used by many countries & ppl, not just M'sian Chinese, if not those moron arab-wannabe will label u as racist.
 

Lennon

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MNC like Sony and HP will have decent control over their china counterparts...... But if it's solely china company products i'll totally stay out, it's just suicide..... I thank god Malaysia wasn't plague with China's good yet, unlike US and Australia.... China bosses will sacrifice anything even life for their own fortune, there's blood in their hand.....
 

limch1

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Seems like US is starting to fear of China economy. More and more products from China is either getting recall or stop at the US custom. US is starting to give some pressure to China. Global politics and economy.
 

MeraBoy

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updates- 6 July 2007

Foreign Tire Sales Inc. hopes to begin the recall on July 16 which could involve up to 450,000 possibly unsafe tires.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration could impose penalties of up to $6,000 per violation, with a maximum of nearly $16.4 million, if it doesn't remedy the problem.

NJ Importer Submits Chinese Tire Recall Plan
By Linda A. Johnson, AP Business Writer
Manufacturing.Net - July 03, 2007
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - A tire importing company ordered to recall thousands of light truck radial tires that were purchased from a Chinese manufacturer said Monday it had submitted a recall plan to the federal government.

Foreign Tire Sales Inc., a small importer based in Union, N.J., said it hopes to begin the recall July 16. The company said it would soon release details of the plan on its Web site and would establish an 800 number for consumers and dealers.

A spokesman said the company is setting up procedures to replace tires for free and to render the recalled ones unusable.

The company was required to submit the plan by Monday to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which must approve the plan before the recall can start. It could involve up to 450,000 possibly unsafe tires.

Heather Hopkins, a spokeswoman for the agency, said late Monday it had received the plan and would review it.

The safety administration last week notified Foreign Tire Sales that the company is responsible for the recall and faces penalties of up to $6,000 per violation, with a maximum of nearly $16.4 million, if it doesn't remedy the problem. The New Jersey Attorney General's Office has joined the investigation.

Foreign Tire Sales said in a statement that its tire engineer determined at some point that the company ''was being sold tires that did not meet our own standards and posed a safety hazard.''

The tires in question, manufactured by Hangzhou Zhongce Rubber Company, could suffer tread separation because they were made without a safety feature that helps bind the belts of a tire.

They were sold between mid-2002 and mid-2006 under the brand names Westlake, Compass and YKS.

The company said that because the manufacturer is not assisting, the recall is jeopardizing the ''very existence'' of Foreign Tire, which has only 13 full-time and three part-time employees.

''FTS will make every effort to locate, identify and replace all of the affected tires it imported into the United States,'' the statement said. ''FTS has gone the extra mile in its testing and subsequent early notification of a possible problem.''

The tires in question all bear the letters ''LT'' for the tire size, plus DOT numbers starting with ''7D'' and ending in ''02,'' ''03,'' ''04'' or ''05.''

Foreign Tire Sales said it believes the Chinese company sold the same tires to other companies.
Source:
Welcome to Manufacturing.Net
 

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