NHTSA Investigates GM ABS Problems!!!!
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NHTSA Investigates GM ABS Problems!!!! ZR800 05-03-2005, 12:23 PM
Government investigating brakes on 1.2 million GM trucks By KEN THOMAS Associated Press Writer May 3, 2005, 1:33 AM EDT WASHINGTON -- The government has opened an investigation of more than 1.2 million General Motors Corp. pickup trucks and sport utility vehicles in Connecticut and 20 other states amid questions about the vehicles' antilock brakes. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said Monday that stopping distances may increase when the brakes are applied at speeds of under 10 mph because of the build up of corrosion. NHTSA has reported nearly two dozen crashes, including one that involved six vehicles and four injuries because of the problem. There have been no fatalities associated with the braking issue. The investigation involves 1.27 million GM trucks and SUVs from the 1999-2002 model years in the following states: Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Wisconsin, West Virginia. It also covers the District of Columbia. The vehicles include the GMC Sierra, GMC Tahoe, GMC Yukon Denali, GMC Yukon XL, GMC Yukon XL Denali; Chevrolet Avalanche, Chevrolet Silverado, Chevrolet Suburban; Cadillac Escalade, and Cadillac EXT. GM, the world's largest automaker, recalled about 150,000 pickups in eastern Canada in November 2004 from the same model years because of the condition in the antilock brakes. In some of the vehicles, the corrosion of salt and other cold-weather road substances led to unwanted activation of the brake system at low speeds and increased the stopping distance. NHTSA said the U.S. cases "appear to be related to the defect condition addressed by GM's safety recall in Canada." GM spokesman Alan Adler said the company reported a failure rate of about 3 incidents per 100,000 vehicles in the Canadian recalls. The company announced a recall of more than 2 million vehicles last week, including nearly 1.5 million sport utility vehicles and pickups because of problems with their seat belts. BlenderWizard 05-03-2005, 12:41 PM My truck was built at the Fort Wayne, Indiana plant, but I live in Georgia. I'm really not sure if that pertains to me or not. Rhymingmechanic 05-03-2005, 01:36 PM It looks like they are saving money by basing the recall on location rather than fixing all defective/ possibly defective parts. Apparently you are covered if the truck is registered in some states that use lots of road salt. But what about people from other states who travel in the winter, or people in the West who regularly drive over mountain passes? GM also announced a parking brake recall in the last week or two--but only for manual trans trucks. I think an automatic has the same bad parking brake system. There's just less chance of rolling with the auto in park. kenny-1907 05-03-2005, 02:11 PM I live in Winnipeg and they use a TON of salt here on the roads. Thankfully i have not had any problems with the antilock brakes on my truck..........yet , although i did get a recall in the mail for the antilock brake problem but GM's system was/is all screwed up and i got someone elses recall. At least it was my own personal info on the recall with the exception of the vin# and when i enquired about the recall they told me that my truck was not part of the recall because i did not live in the desiginated areas that the recall was for. Saltymut 05-03-2005, 05:54 PM Correct me if I'm wrong on this, but the reason for the recall being mainly in the northern states is due to the salt causing corrosion to the ABS equipment, right? Well, I live near the Gulf Coast in Texas and own a boat. I've experienced, first hand, what salt water and salt air can do to a boat and a vehicle. Why would this environment be any different than salt on the roads? ZR800 05-04-2005, 07:47 AM I think the environment is much different. When they salt the roads, they litterally dump TONS of salt on the road, which turns everything to slush which literally sprays up and cakes your car, undercarraige, wheel wells, etc. Ever seen a nice dry road in the Northeast in January? The pavement will look white, absolutely covered with salt. It will take a couple rains storms to rinse it away in the spring, and during that road wash, it will all be spraying up on your car. I agree the ocean salt can be corrosive, I saw it first hand 2 weeks ago in FT Lauderdale on my in-laws condo, all the window tracks and light fixtures covered, but I think the conditions in the North are considerably worse. Southern cars sell well in the North. BlenderWizard 05-04-2005, 08:51 AM I'm from texas, near the coast, and I know that ocean salt is AT LEAST as bad as salted roads. Either place you're getting a salt/sand mix, and that is hell on everything. ZR800 05-04-2005, 08:59 AM I would definately argue it is "AT LEAST" as bad. Do you have any idea what cars up here look like after number of years?????? Again, southern vehicles are sought after up here, and many used body panels people purchase to replace their rusted out ones are from the south. Many dealers up here travel to auctions in Fl and bring back the vehicles. But you say you "know that ocean salt is AT LEAST as bad" so I am curious as to how you know that? Are there facts somewhere? I would like to know the actual answer. Seabornman 05-04-2005, 10:03 AM I would encourage anyone who has experienced the abs problem with their truck to file a complaint with the NHTSA at http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/ivoq/ . GM's assertion that this problem is happening to only 3% of trucks in the rust areas of Canada is ludicrous. Everyone I've talked to with a truck with over 40,000 miles has had the problem here. I just removed the fuse from the ABS system as a short term fix. Also, I have to agree with the guys who live near the coast - there's a lot of older rust buckets in coastal towns. It's not good for a vehicle to drive through salt water or sit near the ocean in the spray. BlenderWizard 05-04-2005, 10:05 AM I would definately argue it is "AT LEAST" as bad. Do you have any idea what cars up here look like after number of years?????? Again, southern vehicles are sought after up here, and many used body panels people purchase to replace their rusted out ones are from the south. Many dealers up here travel to auctions in Fl and bring back the vehicles. But you say you "know that ocean salt is AT LEAST as bad" so I am curious as to how you know that? Are there facts somewhere? I would like to know the actual answer. Do you have any idea what a car that stays near the beach looks like after a couple year? A rusted out hunk of crap. You said "southern," I said "near the coast." I have seen a few people have their ENTIRE CAR sprayed with bedliner... that seems to help. Seabornman 05-04-2005, 10:05 AM Forgot to mention - here is central NY - more snow (and salt) than any other major metropolitan area of US. BlenderWizard 05-04-2005, 10:08 AM FYI - auto manufacturers use a salt water spray to test corrosion resistance on body panels. ZR800 05-04-2005, 11:28 AM Do you have any idea what a car that stays near the beach looks like after a couple year? A rusted out hunk of crap. You said "southern," I said "near the coast." I have seen a few people have their ENTIRE CAR sprayed with bedliner... that seems to help. IN LAWS HAVE A 10 YEAR OLD CAR PARKED THAT HAS BEEN PARKED 200 YARDS OFF THE OCEAN IN FL ITS WHOLE LIFE. EFFECTS OF THE SALT IS NO WHERE EVEN NEAR COMPARABLE. Chevyman15004X4 05-04-2005, 06:30 PM I don't live on the coast but when I went to college, All my friends vehicles that were from up north were rust buckets which were about 10 year old vehicles or less. I mean the brake lines, body and chassis. I bought a van from up north that there where holes in the body membors, No lower body panels all the way around (all rusted through), The back bumper is fixing to fall off, (moves a little when I step on it) and the inside floor board has large holes in it. Every time i close the door, a plile of rust fall off of it somewhere. I recently had the rust pile towed off. Vehicle was about 15 years old. I just put this up here for someone else to give a comparison of what they of seen on the southern coasts. who fan 05-04-2005, 06:43 PM I would also argue the point. Cars are lasting longer now do to improved coating. I remember back in the late 70`s seeing four year old trucks with the doors falling off them. Wooden flat beds replacing the steel box that was once there. I`d take the coast any day. gremlin96 05-04-2005, 10:50 PM well if the ntsh wants a truck to study thay can have mine. I had the abs problem since day one. that was one of the first problems that i had the truck in for. the abs system was kicking on in parking lots. that was even befor the first time i had it on salted roads. its bad enuff that i have been thinking of riding the motor cycle in the rain insted of the truck. all the dealer could say was well it kicks in when your on sand. that was a hoot i was never on sand. when it was kicking in it should of kicked in in the driveway at work since it has heavy sanded. been a over year trying to get that fixed, Also the sudden lack of power. you can be driving a long then bam the truck feels like it was hit, only last a second or two. then its fine. untill you try to go up hill. when i have down shifted any truck and held the gas to the floor normly you can get the rpms way up. this truck nope on some days it will never climb above 2k. untill you stop shut off the truck restart then put it into first and finsh going up hill. spent one day just going up that hill. every 5 time it would act up. just to be shure its not me, I have had 6 others drive the truck 3 say thay will never drive it agen. thay are semi drivers. one i had to delever his truck to him he got out side of town and it did its stall / shuter / stamer/ or what ever the dealers want to call it, but cant find. he thought he hit some one it shook that bad. BlenderWizard 05-05-2005, 08:25 AM I really don't know why the dealers give people such a hard time about doing warranty work... GM reimburses them Faze3 05-05-2005, 12:51 PM I really don't know why the dealers give people such a hard time about doing warranty work... GM reimburses them That's easy. Becase they can't con GM into getting other things done at the same time.* Holds true for any other mfg; Not GM-specific. *Apologies to any honest mechanics reading this. I know there are some out there. I've met a few. BlenderWizard 05-05-2005, 01:18 PM Well, I will say this for all of you in GA: I just had my rear quarter window replaced oon the passenger's side under warranty. I took it to Cobb Parkway Chevrolet. They did it very quickly (they had to order the window unit), and they did it with no questions asked. If you have any warranty work needing to be done, I suggest this dealership. Ask for Tim when you go there. ZR800 05-05-2005, 03:52 PM Also the sudden lack of power. you can be driving a long then bam the truck feels like it was hit, only last a second or two. then its fine. untill you try to go up hill. when i have down shifted any truck and held the gas to the floor normly you can get the rpms way up. this truck nope on some days it will never climb above 2k. untill you stop shut off the truck restart then put it into first and finsh going up hill. spent one day just going up that hill. every 5 time it would act up. May sound stupid, but you have changed your fuel filter right? That is very similar to the way mine was acting when my filter went bad, I couldn't get the RPMS over 2K. $8 filter and I was on my way and have not had that problem since, of course I replace my filter about once a year now. gremlin96 05-08-2005, 03:29 PM May sound stupid, but you have changed your fuel filter right? That is very similar to the way mine was acting when my filter went bad, I couldn't get the RPMS over 2K. $8 filter and I was on my way and have not had that problem since, of course I replace my filter about once a year now. the filter should be ok. heck for 8 bucks i will try it. I have found around here thay do volume work. get it in and out. You can get more cash back from gm. so if thay must spend time on a truck getting it fixed is a hasle. why spend a 4 hours to find a problem. when you have a computer that will tell you how to fix 5 cars in the same amout of time. if your having problems with the abs. let the nhtsa know. http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/portal/site/nhtsa/menuitem.9fee1be6b2b2000bc22cf37490008a0c/ jumpingjack66 05-08-2005, 07:59 PM anymore info on that recall for parking brakes on manual trucks mine has been fixed and contantly broken every three monthes?...jj Sunspot 02-07-2008, 03:40 PM I work at a shop and we have 2 1997 Silverado with the ABS problem too. Looks like the recall only goes back to 99. But the symptoms are exactly what everyone here says. No ABS light on, scan tool picks up no codes, scan tool shows all Wheel Speed Sensors reading the same speed, and the ABS kicks in at very slow speed stops. I wonder if it is the same fix. At this point I don't care if it is in the recall, just want to know what fixes it. ZR800 02-07-2008, 03:45 PM Sounds like shit, tastes like shit, works like shit..... MUST BE SHIT! wafrederick 02-07-2008, 04:26 PM GM's repair for the abs recall was to clean the speed sensors and it does not do a thing to fix it.I heard this,they will not replace the wheel bearings which is the true culprit under,is not covered under the recall.The best fix is to replace the front wheel bearings which come with a new ABS wheel speed sensor installed in the wheel bearing.My father had a problem with his 2002 GMC Dually and the left front wheel bearing was bad.The problem is gone ever since the left front wheel bearing was replaced. Related Links Enter the largest automotive community on the planet! |