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CAPA
Confirms Decertification of Tacoma Hood and Recommends Recall
Washington, DC:
CAPA recently completed its investigation of JLH-13900, a hood for the
1995-2000 Toyota Tacoma produced by Jui Li. CAPA's investigation was prompted
by a report that a replacement hood on a 1997 Toyota Tacoma pickup flew
up during a test drive by a repair technician. Nine business days after
receiving notice, CAPA decertified the Jui Li part pending completion
of its full investigation and notified the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration of the potential defect.
CAPA has completed
its investigation, verified a nonconformance in the Jui Li part and the
decertification of JLH-13900 stands. The part must pass a complete dimensional
inspection and vehicle test fit before returning to the program.
As a result of this
complaint investigation, CAPA has updated the hood checking fixture requirements
to increase measurement checks of secondary latches in multiple directions.
In addition, CAPA has reinspected all hoods with primary and secondary
striker configurations in factory inventories. CAPA will check those not
currently in inventory upon completion of the next production run and
is in the process of reinspecting all hoods.
"CAPA, like all
standard setting organizations and product certifiers, is continually
improving its standards and program requirements and this investigation
enabled us to yet further improve our process. Anything less than continued
improvement would simply not be in keeping with CAPA's philosophy,"
said Jack Gillis, Executive Director.
"By implementing
these changes and increasing its product oversight, CAPA is demonstrating
the importance of an independent, third party standard setting organization
in the market," said Bob Anderson, Anderson's Automotive and CAPA's
Board President.
CAPA
Recommends Recall
As in all industries, recalling a defective part is the responsibility
of the manufacturer and the distribution network. CAPA strongly recommends
a recall of any defective parts and that all parties involved in the sale
of the part participate fully in the process. The manufacturer, Jui Li,
has taken steps to comply with the recall.
CAPA Recommended Recall Guidelines to
Remove Parts from the Market
The following are suggested recall guidelines for various parties involved
in the sale, requested use, distribution or installation of Jui Li Hood
#JLH-13900.
Manufacturers:
Manufacturers (in this case Jui Li, who has agreed to participate) should
carefully review sales records and notify all distributors who have received
decertified parts. They should ask distributors to destroy parts in their
warehouses and provide them with a refund, replacement, or credit. (CAPA's
Recall facilitation procedure requires such action.) They should also
request that distributors contact their customers regarding these parts.
Insurance
Companies:
Insurance companies should review their databases for estimates requesting
the installation of a certified hood on a 1995-2000 Toyota Tacoma and
contact customers to return to the point of repair for inspection or replacement.
(Note: The insurance company can only determine if that type of part was
requested, not the brand of the part actually used.)
Distributors:
Distributors should review their sales records for all Jui Li hoods sold
for the 1995-2000 Toyota Tacoma and notify their collision repairer customers
of the potential problem. They should ask repairers to contact their customers
and instruct them to return for inspection or replacement.
Collision
Repairers:
Collision repairers should review their repair records for all Jui Li
hoods for the 1995-2000 Toyota Tacoma installed on customer vehicles and
request that their customers return for inspection or replacement. The
CAPA Quality Seal comes with a special feature that enables repairers
to remove an identifying tab for their repair files. That tab has a unique
number that can easily be used to identify the manufacturer, lot, and
type of part before and after installation.
CAPA
Recall Facilitation Program
CAPA takes its responsibility to immediately and effectively notify all
parties of parts that no longer comply with CAPA's rigid standards seriously.
Furthermore, because CAPA strongly believes in the removal of defective
parts from the market, we have instituted a special recall facilitation
program to make it easier to implement a recall and destroy bad parts.
CAPA participants are required to refund, replace or credit part distributors
holding a decertified part upon CAPA's receipt of the small section of
the part bearing the CAPA seal. Cutting this section out of the part eliminates
the need (and expense) of returning the actual product in order to affect
a recall. More importantly, it prohibits the resale of the part.
The Certified Automotive
Parts Association, founded in 1987, is the nation's only independent,
non-profit, third party crash parts quality certification organization.
CAPA certification identifies, for both consumers and the industry, those
parts that meet our high quality standards for fit, form, finish, material
content and corrosion resistance. For more information see www.CAPAcertified.org.
Copyright
© 2002 Certified Automotive Parts Association
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