Toyota recalls 600k vehicles in Europe

In this Aug. 2, 2011 file photo, the Toyota Motor Corp. logo is seen on a tire wheel of an Avensis sedan at Toyota’s Tokyo headquarters. Japanese automaker Toyota said Thursday, August 2, 2012, it was recalling 600,000 vehicles in Europe to check for loose nuts in the rear wheel area, following a similar recall in the United States. AP PHOTO/SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI

PARIS—Japanese automaker Toyota said Thursday it was recalling 600,000 vehicles in Europe to check for loose nuts in the rear wheel area, following a similar recall in the United States.

The recall concerns three models – RAV4 sport utility vehicles, Avensis family and Auris compact cars – and follows the recall of 780,000 US vehicles for the same problem.

Toyota said in a statement the recall was not due to a “concept or design” error but a problem that arises during maintenance.

When it announced the US recall, Toyota said it had determined that if nuts on the rear suspension arm of some of its vehicles were tightened incorrectly after a wheel alignment, rust can form to the point where parts break off.

These latest recalls come a month after Toyota added two models to a controversial 2009 recall launched after floor mats became trapped under the accelerator and were linked to accidents which allegedly caused dozens of deaths.

Toyota’s mishandling of the initial problem and other reports of sudden, unintended acceleration led to the recall of more than 12 million vehicles worldwide, a US congressional probe, more than $50 million (41 million euros) in fines from US regulators and public apologies by its chief.

Toyota has worked hard since to regain its once-stellar reputation for safety, even as the Japanese giant faced the impact of the economic crisis, a strong yen and the devastating 2011 quake and tsunami.

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