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U.S. Investigates 420K Ford F-150s for Brake Failure

Drivers say that the pedals can suddenly go to the floor with a complete loss of braking.

Ford F 150 56d9a1fe79d0d
AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

The U.S. government is investigating complaints that the brakes can fail on Ford's F-150 pickup truck, one of the most popular vehicles in the nation.

Ford's F-Series pickup is the top-selling vehicle in the U.S., and the F-150 accounts for two-thirds of those sales.

The probe covers about 420,000 pickups with 3.5-Liter, six-cylinder engines from the 2013 and 2014 model years, according to documents posted Friday on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's website.

The agency says it has 33 complaints about the problem, including some drivers reporting that the pedals can suddenly go to the floor with a complete loss of braking. Four drivers reported that the problem caused crashes, although there were no injuries. The agency reported that 31 of the complaints from F-150 drivers came in the past year, with 20 in the past seven months.

Some of the drivers reported that mechanics told them brake fluid had leaked from the master cylinder to the brake booster, causing the problem.

Ford said it takes customer safety seriously and will cooperate with the investigation. Trucks with other engines could also be covered by the probe. Ford says F-150s with other engines have the same braking system.

One owner from San Marcos, California, told NHTSA that he was backing his pickup out of the driveway in May of 2015 when the pedal went to the floor and he completely lost his brakes. The pickup crossed the street, went over a curb and hit a neighbor's landscape wall, causing severe damage, the driver wrote.

"I am surprised that there has been no action on this issue yet — the complete failure of the most important safety system of a 2.5-ton-plus vehicle," the driver wrote. Drivers who file complaints with NHTSA are not identified in the agency's database.

Drivers are not identified in the agency's complaint database.

NHTSA investigators will check into how often the problem happens and how large it might be to decide whether a recall is necessary.

Ford sold 763,402 F-series pickups in 2013 and another 753,851 in 2014, according to Autodata Corp.

 

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