| Saturn Recalls 246,000 VUE Vehicles
By David
Runk, Associated Press Writer
Saturn Recalls More Than 246,000 VUE Sport Utility Vehicles
on Rear Suspension Probe
DETROIT (AP)
-- Saturn will voluntarily recall nearly all of its VUE sport utility
vehicles, which regulators are investigating because the vehicle's
rear suspension failed during two government rollover tests.
The recall
by the General Motors Corp. division affects 246,433 VUEs in the
2002-2004 model years, including 231,123 in the United States and
15,310 in Canada.
"We're
not pleased with this, and we're working hard to see it never happens
again," GM vice chairman and chief financial officer John Devine
said while attending an auto seminar in Traverse City. "Rather
than talk about it, we'd rather fix it."
GM has had a
spate of costly recalls this year involving several million vehicles.
The world's No. 1 automaker cited higher recall costs as a drag
on its second-quarter financial results released last month, but
still earned $1.34 billion in the April-June quarter, up from $901
million a year ago.
On Thursday,
shares of GM fell 59 cents to close at $42.54 on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Last month,
the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said the left-rear
suspension failed on the four-wheel-drive and front-wheel-drive
Saturn VUEs in June during a 45-mph test that includes a sharp turn.
Both times a wheel collapsed beneath the vehicle.
Saturn said
the VUE did not roll over during the test, but said the rear suspension
was damaged when a wheel struck the pavement. Saturn said it will
make adjustments to strengthen the VUE's suspension.
Saturn retailers
began calling VUE owners late Wednesday to alert them to the recall.
VUE owners will be formally notified by a letter. They then will
be advised when to bring in their VUEs so modifications can be made
at no cost.
In addition,
Saturn retailers will conduct consumer education clinics for VUE
owners that will explain the test and how the suspension modification
will help the VUE complete the NHTSA evaluation.
NHTSA spokesman
Rae Tyson said the recall won't immediately affect the status of
the government's investigation.
"We'll
leave the investigation open. We need to make sure the remedy they're
offering is going to satisfactorily address the issue," Tyson
said. "Certainly, we're pleased that they've stepped forward
and provided a remedy."
NHTSA this year
began testing a vehicle's tendency to roll over with a moving test.
Before that, the agency measured rollover propensity using a mathematical
formula based on a vehicle's height and width. Under the old formula,
the 2003 Saturn VUE received three out of five stars for rollover
resistance. NHTSA hasn't given the 2004 VUE a starred rating.
A Saturn spokeswoman
said changes were made in the VUE production line starting Monday.
The VUE, which was introduced in the 2002 model year, is produced
at Saturn's manufacturing facility in Spring Hill, Tenn.
AP Auto Writer
John Porretto in Traverse City contributed to this report.
National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration: http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov
General Motors
Corp.: http://www.gm.com
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