WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Ford said on Wednesday it is recalling nearly 1.45 million older vehicles in the U.S. due to faulty rear-view cameras and will extend warranty coverage on millions of other ...
WASHINGTON, Oct 22 (Reuters) - Ford (F.N), opens new tab said on Wednesday it is recalling nearly 1.45 million older vehicles in the U.S. due to faulty rear-view cameras and will extend warranty ...
WASHINGTON — Ford said on Wednesday it is recalling nearly 1.45 million older vehicles in the U.S. due to faulty rear-view cameras and will extend warranty coverage on millions of other vehicles. The ...
WASHINGTON — Ford said Wednesday it is recalling nearly 1.45 million older vehicles in the United States due to faulty rear-view cameras and will extend warranty coverage on millions of other vehicles ...
Ford is recalling nearly 1.45 million older vehicles in the United States over faulty rear-view cameras and the automaker will extend warranty coverage on millions of other vehicles. The announcement ...
Ford is recalling more than 290,000 vehicles in the U.S. because the rearview camera system may not display images properly in certain lighting conditions, which could increase the risk of a crash.
Ford Motor is recalling nearly 1.5 million older vehicles in the United States. The rear cameras could stop working, increasing the risk of a crash. Ford is offering a 15-year extended warranty on ...
The recall covers various 2015–2020 model years, including the Explorer, Escape, Mustang, Flex, Fiesta, C‑Max, Taurus and Fusion, plus the Lincoln MKT and MKZ. Credit: Yousef Osman 8/Shutterstock.com.
Ford has issued a recall notice for more than 291,000 vehicles over a potential issue with the rearview camera causing the image to be displayed improperly in certain lighting conditions. The recall ...
Ford Recalls More Than 290,000 Vehicles in US Due to Issue With Rearview Camera System Ford is recalling more than 290,000 vehicles in the U.S. because the rearview camera system may not display ...
Ford is recalling more than 290,000 vehicles in the U.S. because the rearview camera system may not display images properly in certain lighting conditions, which could increase the risk of a crash.