450K cheap Chinese tires may be recalled

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ALS

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Cheap Chinese tires missing a safety feature are blamed for a fatal traffic accident, according to a lawsuit in New Jersey that warns as many as 450,000 light truck tires may need to be recalled.

A gum strip that helps prevent separation of steel belts might have been omitted in tires manufactured by China's Hangzhou Zhongce Rubber Co. and imported by Foreign Tire Sales Inc., of Union, N.J., reported ConsumerAffairs.com

The tires were sold under the names Westlake, Telluride, Compass and YKS.

"This is a prime example of a private lawsuit with a substantial public benefit," said Jeffrey B. Killino, an attorney with Woloshin & Killino, which represents the families of the deceased and injured. "The Hangzhou Rubber Company deliberately and secretly removed a safety feature from these tires and two young men died as a direct result. This was a tragedy that didn't have to happen, but hopefully we can prevent future fatal crashes."

The lawsuit, filed by Foreign Tire Sales Inc., or FTS, charges tread separation caused a cargo van carrying four passengers to crash in Pennsylvania Aug.12, 2006, killing two passengers and injuring the other two, ConsumerAffairs.com reported.

FTS, noting other American distributors might also have been selling the tires, warns a recall may be necessary, estimating a million or more tires involved.

FTS says it can't afford to pay for the recall and is seeking to shift liability to the Chinese manufacturer, ConsumerAffairs.com reported. The American company says the Hangzhou firm removed the safety feature without notifying its U.S. distributors.

FTS began noticing an abnormal number of complaints from consumers a few years ago. After an ambulance crash in May 2006, the company examined the blown tire that caused it and said it found the Chinese manufacturer had failed to include the 0.6 mm gum strip between the belts.

FTS says the tire might meet minimal U.S. safety requirements, but the distributor often requires its suppliers to add extra safety and durability features.

According to FTS, tires manufactured by Hangzhou were also sold by the following distributors:


Tireco, Compton, California

Strategic Import Supply, Wayzata, Minnesota

Omni United USA, Inc., Jacksonville, Florida

Orteck International, Inc. of Gaithersburg, Maryland

K&D Tire Wholesalers LLC, Carlsbad, California

Robinson Tire in Laurel, Mississippi. Safety Research & Strategies, Inc.

Posted: June 26, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com
 
Are we taking bets that the Chinese company built the tires exactly they way the contract from the American company stipulated?
 
No, it is their own brand rather than the one Cooper outsourced to. The scary part is, FTS said it cannot afford to pay for the recall and is seeking to shift liability to the chinese manufacture.

Can't they understand that they shouldn't be importing them if they cannot afford a recall in the first place?
 
Cheap goods, cheap labor.....

as long as we maximize profit all is well.

Let the shoddy products maim and kill. With 6 billion humans we will not run out of people any time soon.
 
Is there no end to the junk
mad.gif
coming out of China? Melamine in their wheat products, antifreeze in their toothpaste, lead paint used for baby bibs and now this. I read that there are so many independent producers in China that their government can't begin to regulate them. The rest of the world will take care of that if this continues by refusing their shoddy and hazardous products...cheap or not.
 
I hope the Feds start taking a look at ALL of the ____ coming out of China that consumers mindless gobble up. It's an epidemic. The Chinese businesses don't care and know that the US's uninformed, stupid consumers will buy any piece of ____ as long as it's .10 cents cheaper.
 
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The Chinese businesses don't care and know that the US's uninformed, stupid consumers will buy any piece of ____ as long as it's .10 cents cheaper.




That's definitely a huge part of the problem. I certainly wouldn't trust my safety to unknown names like Westlake, Telluride, Compass, and YKS. These are not real tire companies. Who does the buyer think will take responsibility when there's a serious problem? These "brand names" have nothing to lose by disappearing.
 
I'll stick with my Bridgestone and Michelin's. Tires are not a place to cheap out ever with the unknown brands.

That being said if the Bridgestone or Michelin tire was made in China I would have little issue with it.
 
I try to avoid made in china stuff as possible. My experience has been very low quality and considering the quality the price is way too high. For example the stuff China Freight sells is barely worth what you pay for.
 
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