Car recalls for March 4-11
U.S. National Highway Traffic & Safety Administration
USA TODAY
The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has issued recalls for March 4 through 11, including a Nissan recall involving 807,376 units and a Porsche recall involving 39,547 units. See the list of this week s car recalls involving ten or more units below, or search USA TODAY s automotive recalls database for more:
Audi
Volkswagen Group of America, Inc. (Audi) is recalling certain 2019-2021 Audi A8 and 2020-2021 Audi S8 vehicles. A missing sealing pin may allow moisture to enter the engine control module connector, possibly causing a control module malfunction. 238 units are affected. Read more
NHSA Recall Summary March 8, 2021
The following
may apply to one or more of your vehicles
if your vehicle is listed below. Click on the NHTSA Recall ID Number below to read more about the safety issue and the reason for the recall.
To find out if your specific passenger vehicle is included in the recall, use our VIN Look-up Tool.
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What is a recall? When a manufacturer or the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) determines that a vehicle creates an
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Porsche Taycan Reaches 102 mph
February 10, 2021 GMT
NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 10, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Even when circumstances mean that being indoors is the safe and, at times, unexciting option, racer Leh Keen recently found a way to make being indoors considerably less boring.
There’s a Guinness World Records title for the fastest speed by a vehicle indoors – and, until recently, it stood at 86 mph. The rules – strictly enforced by Guinness World Records - are daunting. Leh had to start his record attempt and finish it at a standstill, all within the space of the building – there could be no run up, no safety net and no doors open and therefore no escape route. For good reasons, therefore, the record has stood for seven years.