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-   -   Hyundai adds about 6,100 cars to sunroof recall (https://www.hyundaiaftermarket.org/forum/hyundai-veloster-forum-267/hyundai-adds-about-6-100-cars-sunroof-recall-72644/)

Visionz 02-27-2013 09:43 AM

Hyundai adds about 6,100 cars to sunroof recall
 

Hyundai is adding more Veloster hatchbacks to a recall for panoramic sunroofs that can shatter and cause injuries.



In December, the automaker recalled about 13,500 of the funky cars from the 2012 model year. Now it's adding about 6,100 more, bringing the total to 19,600 in the U.S. The additional Velosters were built from July 4, 2011 through Oct. 31, 2011.



Hyundai said in December that it knows of no crashes from the problem, but five people suffered minor cuts.



The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration began investigating the cars in October after getting complaints from customers. The company traced the problem to a manufacturing defect that damaged the sunroof glass.



Hyundai says it will inspect and replace the glass if needed.


:Paranoid2:

Tak82 02-27-2013 09:56 AM

how did this problem get past the strict korean quality standards?



the roof glass should be laminated as the front windshield should be

HyundaiKitCoupe 02-28-2013 12:11 AM

Scheißdreck.

bdiggy 02-28-2013 07:45 AM


Originally Posted by Tak82 (Post 679073)
how did this problem get past the strict korean quality standards?



the roof glass should be laminated as the front windshield should be

It is laminated, which is why it didn't completely shatter into a million pieces, but the glass in the middle wasn't set right, and it was done through subcontract. My car's didn't explode on the street, but failed inspection Monday when I took it in. They drop a ball bearing through a tube on to the glass, lol.....

wheel_of_steel 02-28-2013 08:21 AM


the glass in the middle wasn't set right, and it was done through subcontract.


I don't understand, was it a manufacturing flaw or an assembly flaw?

187sks 02-28-2013 01:55 PM


Originally Posted by bdiggy (Post 679144)
It is laminated, which is why it didn't completely shatter into a million pieces, but the glass in the middle wasn't set right, and it was done through subcontract. My car's didn't explode on the street, but failed inspection Monday when I took it in. They drop a ball bearing through a tube on to the glass, lol.....

It broke from that test?

bdiggy 02-28-2013 08:50 PM

Yep...all the exploding ones had weakened glass in the middle of the laminate so the twisting and natural body roll, plus changing external temps were preying on the weakened sections. The flaw is in the glass, not in the assembley. Kind of wish I had been in the garage to see it, but I heard it from outside.

187sks 03-01-2013 11:41 AM

Wow, that's pretty crazy.

wheel_of_steel 03-02-2013 01:14 AM

What if it's just strong enough to resist a ball from a tube? :Paranoid2:

bdiggy 03-02-2013 08:46 AM

Here's what was on Youtube....no test or showing of the explosion, but explaination of what was going down when it happened to the guy.Just normal driving and BOOM! Glad mine went down in the shop. 95 is a big road, lol.

[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJelVBZaMh0[/media]


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