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US safety agency closes probe into Dodge and Ram rotary gear shifters without seeking a recall

U.S. auto safety regulators will not seek a recall after a seven-year investigation into complaints that more than 1 million Dodge and Ram vehicles can roll away after being shifted into park

Via AP news wire
Monday 29 January 2024 14:20 GMT
Stellantis-Rollaway Investigation
Stellantis-Rollaway Investigation (Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

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U.S. auto safety regulators will not seek a recall after a seven-year investigation into complaints that Dodge and Ram vehicles can roll away after being shifted into park.

The problem was similar to one that was blamed in the death of Star Trek actor Anton Yelchin, although the company was in the process of recalling his 2015 Jeep Grand Cherokee to address the issue.

The investigation, opened in December of 2016, covered almost 1.3 million Ram 1500 pickup trucks from the 2013 to 2017 model years, as well as Dodge Durango SUVs from 2014 through 2017.

At issue were electronic dial-like rotary gear selector knobs that were new at the time and different from previous mechanical shifters that used a lever to select gears. The knobs are turned to the left or right and have detents that click into gear.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says in documents posted on its website Monday that it and Stellantis, formerly Fiat Chrysler, had received nearly 1,500 complaints that the vehicles would roll after drivers put them in park.

But the agency said it did not find evidence that a design or manufacturing defect caused the rollaway incidents. Plus, Fiat Chrysler did a ā€œcustomer satisfaction campaignā€ to update software so the vehicles automatically shift into park if the driver's door is opened.

The agency said it monitored vehicles that got the update and found that the service campaign was ā€œeffective in reducing the frequency of vehicle rollaway incidents in the subject vehicles.ā€

Investigators also analyzed reports that the vehicles rolled away even after the software update, but did not find an ā€œactionable defectā€ that caused the problems. The agency also said that after the service campaign, customer complaints significantly decreased.

ā€œGiven the absence of an identified safety defect based on available information and FCAā€™s customer satisfaction campaign which addresses the failure mode, further action is not warranted at this time,ā€ the agency wrote.

Yelchin, 27, known for playing Chekov in the Star Trek film series, died in June of 2016 after his Jeep pinned him against a mailbox pillar and security fence at his home in Los Angeles.

His Grand Cherokee SUV was among a group of vehicles recalled because of complaints from drivers who had trouble telling if they put the console-mounted shift levers in park after stopping. Many reported that the vehicles rolled off after the driver exited.

The Grand Cherokee shift levers like Yelchinā€™s had to be pushed forward or backward to change gears, confusing many drivers. In the recall, Fiat Chrysler changed the software so the vehicles automatically shift into park if the driverā€™s door is opened.

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