Have a Hoopty Nissan? Park It!

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

In what is surely one of the oddest advisements from a major automaker in recent memory, Nissan has published a do-not-drive order for cars which have likely been recycled into tin cans some spell ago.

The models noted certain copies of the 2002 – 2006 Nissan Sentra, 2002 – 2004 Nissan Pathfinder, and 2002 – 2003 Infiniti QX4. At issue are the Takata airbags whose inflators are said to have killed over two dozen people in America, at least one of which was in a Sentra covered in this DND order. Apparently, about 84,000 of the 736,000 units originally recalled for this issue have not been fixed, prompting Nissan to tell owners of these rigs to keep them parked.


This airbag debacle with Takata began with recalls over a decade ago and have, at last estimate, ensnared approximately 67 million vehicles from just about all major automakers with rigs on sale in this country. With that in mind, Nissan is far from the only company to issue a DND of this type on machines this old – Toyota and Stellantis are but two other examples.


One has to wonder just how many of those 84,000 are actually still on the road. Nissan has apparently tried numerous times to contact owners, even offering free towing to a repair facility, but their efforts are only so good as the information on hand. If young Junior took grandma’s rusted 2004 Sentra and entered it in last year’s demolition derby at the county fair, it is unlikely Nissan was informed of this development. We wager more than a few of these machines are in a U-Pull yard somewhere.


Information flows more freely through official channels, of course, though it is worth noting not everything ends up being recorded correctly. According to an  official list of vehicles disposed of during the Cash for Clunkers era, not one single Sentra is on the list. We find that difficult to believe, though there were admittedly way more trucks and SUVs meeting their makers during that effort than compact cars thanks to a myriad of rules and reasons. Fun fact: there were 61,804 Explorers recorded as destroyed of the nearly 680,000 machines that found themselves on the pointy end of that program.


[Image: Nissan]


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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

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  • Wolfwagen Wolfwagen on May 30, 2024

    Short of the example given (or similar circumstances) I would find it hard to believe that they would not be able to account for a majority of these cars. Does anyone else remember the stories of AMC/Chrysler sending parts guys out to junkyards to deposit new heater cores in old AMC Alliances?

  • Lorenzo Lorenzo on May 30, 2024

    Every state auto registry has the data needed to find the owners of those models. Can't automakers us the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System (NMVTIS) system (set up under the anti-car-theft act of 1992)? I would think the DOJ would allow its use for safety purposes.

  • TheMrFreeze JD Power's surveys mean nothing to me. We live in an age where we have unprecedented access to actual, relevant data, and by that I mean working mechanics who see all of these cars up close and are willing to share what's good and what's crap. The wife drives a Fiat 500...had I listened to JD Power or Consumer Reports or whatnot we never would have bought one, but more than one mechanic I talked to said they were pretty reliable cars. Bought one, guess what...it's been reliable.
  • Akear Mary Barra has little or no feel for the market. This is yet another reason why GM will perform better when she retires. Barra's track record at GM is about as good as Biden debate performance last week.
  • Peter Nissan should hire someone to explain basic economics to their Board of Directors.
  • Jeff China now has the manufacturing capacity to produce 1/3 of the World's vehicles but under the current geopolitical environment this will not happen. As someone above stated all bets are off if China invades Taiwan. What many don't understand is that China plans for the long term and can wait it out till the geopolitical environment becomes less hostile toward China. I am not endorsing Chinese trade just stating that China is preparing for the future.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Im glad it was fixed in time that would’ve been a huge pain and inconvenience to you if it had broke. My 2009 C6 Corvette LS3 has been great with no recalls. My 1985 Toyota Land Cruiser FJ60 actually had a recall for the gas tank and seat belt warning stickers about 10 years go and Toyota fixed it, got a new tank, fuel lines and stickers.
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