In fairness to Honda, this particular fault would have been difficult to detect in incoming quality control as it was an omission of a part within an assembly thus not detectable thru visual inspection. Seat belt pretensioners are activated either by an inertia lock or a pyrotechnic device. Both methods are difficult to test without a special test fixture and in the case of the pyrotechnic device, once it is tested it is no longer functional. Even if testing were possible, most incoming QA departments do not test 100% of the material thus with only a 1% defect rate it is very likely that the defective assemblies would have snuck thru.So much for Honda's fabled quality control for not catching these problem parts before they were installed. In fairness all automotive companies have too many vendors who have too many contractors who have too many sub contractors. No one that far out cares about quality just billable quantity. I hope Honda takes the cost of the recall out of the vendors account.
At .2 for running out to the lot, bringing it into your bay, inspecting the belt, running it back out to the lot and your write up, you ain't gonna get rich! Better rethink this!Yet more booked hours for Honda techs. Maybe I should return to wrenching? I'm smelling money!
Yeah, that's about right. I was joking Mike, no return to the auto tech field for me.At .2 for running out to the lot, bringing it into your bay, inspecting the belt, running it back out to the lot and your write up, you ain't gonna get rich! Better rethink this!
Mike