Ford to address potential braking problem

Ford said yesterday it would fix up to 17,600 hybrid cars that could suffer braking problems as its largest rival, Toyota, grapples…

Ford said yesterday it would fix up to 17,600 hybrid cars that could suffer braking problems as its largest rival, Toyota, grapples with reported braking flaws on its market-leading Prius hybrid.

The Ford announcement came as Consumer Reports said one of its engineers ran a stop sign in a residential area when the brake pedal on a Fusion hybrid sank further than normal and warning lights lit up the dashboard. The car coasted to a stop with minimal brake feel, Consumer Reports said.

"The fact that the pedal goes away is I think for many people very disconcerting, but the fact is if you push hard you do go in to full braking," said David Champion, director of Consumer Reports' vehicle testing centre.

The Ford decision came the same day US safety regulators opened a formal probe into consumer complaints that brakes on Toyota's 2010 Prius had momentary problems after motorists rolled over potholes or bumps, allegedly causing four crashes.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration database has a complaint from a motorist alleging that the Fusion hybrid brakes offered minimal resistance, but the administration has no formal investigation into the Ford vehicles.

Ford said a software glitch on Ford Fusion and Mercury Milan hybrids built on or before October 17th could cause drivers to perceive a loss of braking as the car shifts unnecessarily from regenerative braking into the conventional mode.

A Ford spokesman said the automaker started to see indications of the glitch in October and had notified dealers of the possibility and a software upgrade to resolve it.

The Fusion and Milan hybrids in question would retain full conventional braking and anti-lock braking even with the visual and audible warning indicators, Ford said.

"It's a customer satisfaction program because the car still maintains ... full conventional braking," the company said.

The car maker received a handful of reports about the issue and had heard reports of one minor accident, but no injuries as a result, it said.

In Consumer Reports' case two weeks ago, a test engineer was driving a Fusion hybrid the influential nonprofit magazine bought last year for a review published in September when the braking incident occurred. The magazine has maintained its recommendation on the Fusion hybrid after the incident.

"Being a customer satisfaction program I think is OK in that they do have brakes if you push hard enough," Mr Champion said.

Ford plans to upgrade the software on the vehicles and expects to notify customers by mail that the fix is available at dealerships.

Reuters