Friday, August 13, 2010

Honda Recall 2010 - Latest News

Honda's Recall Could Point To An Industry-Wide Problem - Driver's ...
Honda is recalling about 383000 Accord, Civic and Element vehicles to fix a potential problem with the ignition interlock system.

Honda Recalls 428K Vehicles In North America
WASHINGTON — Honda Motor Co. is recalling the popular Accord and Civic passenger cars to address problems with an ignition switch that could allow the key to be removed without the transmission being shifted into park, its third recall ...

Honda Recall
Honda announced Monday the recall of 314000 Accord, Civic and Element vehicles for problems related to the ignition mechanism that could allow the cars to roll away. Honda has expanded a previously announced recall of certain 2001 and ...

Major Honda Recall - CBS MoneyWatch.com
The automaker is recalling 400000 vehicles due to ignition switch problems. Plus: House to vote on jobs bill today.

Honda to Recall Almost 400K Cars - AOL Hot Searches
Find the latest hot search topics and current, most searched news on AOL Search.



Honda Recalls 383,000 Vehicles
Honda Motor Co. has announced that it would recall 383,000 vehicles sold in the U.S. in order to fix a faulty ignition system that is turning the engine off without being placed in park.

2010 honda recall massive for accord and civic passenger cars
A massive 2010 Honda recall is taking place across the country.

Honda Recall
The recall involves 384,220 vehicles and also includes 2003-2004 model years of the Honda Element. Honda says in a posting with the government that the problem with the automatic transmissions could lead to a vehicle rolling away and increase the risk of a crash.

Honda recall: Is your Accord or Civic on the list?
Honda recall of nearly 400,000 Accords, Civics, and Elements is the automaker's latest attempt to fix faulty ignition lock systems.

Honda to recall 384,000 vehicles over roll-away issues
Washington -- Honda Motor Co. is recalling 384,000 vehicles over concerns that the ignition interlock could fail, allowing vehicles to roll away. It's the Japanese automaker's third recall to address the issue in recent years.



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