Mercedes recalls almost 1m cars over faulty brakes

The Mercedes-Benz M-Class launch in India in 2008.

Getty Images

German carmaker Mercedes-Benz is recalling almost 1m older vehicles from around the world because of potential problems with their braking system.

Over the weekend, the company said it will contact owners of the vehicles as their brakes may be affected by what it called “advanced corrosion”.

The recall affects a total of 993,407 vehicles, including 70,000 in Germany.

Mercedes recalled a similar number of cars last year over a safety issue with their emergency call system.

The company said the vehicles in the latest recall were built between 2004 and 2015 and were from its ML and GL series of SUVs and R-Class luxury minivans.

“We have found that in some of those vehicles, the function of the brake booster could be affected by advanced corrosion in the joint area of the housing,” Mercedes said in a statement on Saturday.

“It might be possible for a particularly strong or hard braking manoeuvre to cause mechanical damage to the brake booster,” it said.

“In such a very rare case, it would not be possible to decelerate the vehicle via the service brake. Thus the risk of a crash or injury would be increased,” it added.

Mercedes said it is starting the recall immediately and that the process would involve inspecting the potentially faulty vehicles and replacing parts if necessary.

Last February, the company recalled over 1m cars because of a defect in its “eCall” feature, which alerts emergency services of an accident and relays the vehicle’s location.

The defect meant it was possible that a wrong location could be sent.

Because the problem was software-related, the fix was mostly done “over the air” – via a wireless download using the car’s existing mobile data connection.

2px presentational grey line

You may also be interested in:

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

The post Mercedes recalls almost 1m cars over faulty brakes appeared first on Automotive News.

Source : Autonews.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *