NHTSA wants Chrysler to recall 2.7 million vehicles to install some kind of crash mitigation hardware on the vehicle to reduce the likelihood of the fuel tank rupturing in a rear end crash.
Should they?
Should they?
On one hand, according to the data, the Jeeps in question are about 2x more likely to leak fuel and catch fire in a rear end crash than other vehicles. NHTSA found that Jeeps were having rear crash fire deaths at a rate of 1 per million miles travelled, while the average for all vehicles is 0.5 fire deaths / million miles.
On the other hand, recalling that many vehicles and repairing them will be a very large task, and very expensive for Chrysler.
On the other hand, recalling that many vehicles and repairing them will be a very large task, and very expensive for Chrysler.
Chrysler rightly argues that its vehicles met all safety standards that were in force at the time they were certified. NHTSA is essentially asking for a retroactive safety recall.
I think a nice middle ground solution might be for Chrysler to develop a retrofit kit, and offer to repair customer vehicles on a request basis. Those who are concerned will get the fix, and those who aren't will not bother. Likely it will be much less than 2.7 million customers.