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BMW airbags recalled over exploding mechanism causing ‘sharp metal fragments to shoot out'

BMW airbags recalled over exploding mechanism causing ‘sharp metal fragments to shoot out'

7NEWS2 days ago

BMW drivers have been urged to check the manufacturing details of their car for a deadly fault.
Faulty airbag inflators which can violently explode if triggered were installed in a number of cars between 2010 and 2012.
In a crash, or if the airbag mis-deploys, the metal housing of the airbag inflator can explode under too much internal pressure, a Product Safety recall said on Friday.
'If the defective airbag inflator ruptures, the airbag can go off with too much explosive force, causing sharp metal fragments to shoot out and kill or seriously injure people in the vehicle,' it said.
'There have been serious injuries and deaths.'
The Takata PSDI-5 airbags were installed in BMW cars that were manufactured between March 18, 2010 to May 24, 2012.
They were installed in E9x vehicles, as part of a special edition pack that included a sports steering wheel upgrade.
'As the airbag gets older, a combination of high temperatures and humidity can cause the airbag inflator propellant to degrade,' the recall said.
Motorists can find the manufacturing date of their vehicle on the driver's side 'B pillar' — it is on the European=type approval label which can be seen when you open the driver's door.
'Do not drive your vehicle under any circumstances if your vehicle is affected,' the recall said.
'Immediately contact your preferred authorised BMW dealer to schedule the replacement airbag.
'Your dealer will arrange to have your vehicle towed to the workshop so that you do not need to drive the vehicle. The airbag replacement and towing are free of charge.
'Your vehicle will be repaired quickly once a booking is made with an authorised BMW dealership.'
Those booking a repair will need their VIN number or vehicle registration number.

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Alfa Romeo Stelvio EV delayed to accommodate hybrid
Alfa Romeo Stelvio EV delayed to accommodate hybrid

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time7 hours ago

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Alfa Romeo Stelvio EV delayed to accommodate hybrid

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However, the Italian brand cancelled its plans to become an EV-only brand in January. According to a March report, last month it was set to end production of all-petrol powered versions of both the current Stelvio and its Giulia sedan sister model, including the Quadrifoglio V6 flagships. The report said production will continue for diesel-powered Stelvio and Giulia variants, which haven't been sold in Australia for several years. According to a second Reuters source, Alfa Romeo is now developing a hybrid version of the next Stelvio, which was revealed in leaked images in April. The same source said it will take some time for the hybrid version to be developed, despite the new Stelvio being based on Stellantis' multi-powertrain STLA Large platform, and confirmed the planned 2026 launch of the next-generation Giulia sedan is so far unaffected by the Stelvio's delay. 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MORE: Everything Alfa Romeo Stelvio Content originally sourced from: The Alfa Romeo Stelvio may take an extended hiatus in Australia once stock of the existing model is exhausted, given the launch of the next-generation mid-size luxury SUV will reportedly be delayed until late 2026 in Europe. Such a delay would mean the second-generation SUV would be unlikely to arrive here until 2027. Reuters has cited sources saying first European deliveries of the new Stelvio will now not take place until September or October 2026, following the slowdown of electric vehicle (EV) demand globally. The next Stelvio was previously due to make its world debut in Italy later this year, ahead of first European deliveries in the first quarter of 2026. It was set to be offered exclusively with electric power, as part of a previously stated goal of Alfa Romeo's to switch to an EV-only lineup by 2027. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. However, the Italian brand cancelled its plans to become an EV-only brand in January. According to a March report, last month it was set to end production of all-petrol powered versions of both the current Stelvio and its Giulia sedan sister model, including the Quadrifoglio V6 flagships. The report said production will continue for diesel-powered Stelvio and Giulia variants, which haven't been sold in Australia for several years. According to a second Reuters source, Alfa Romeo is now developing a hybrid version of the next Stelvio, which was revealed in leaked images in April. The same source said it will take some time for the hybrid version to be developed, despite the new Stelvio being based on Stellantis' multi-powertrain STLA Large platform, and confirmed the planned 2026 launch of the next-generation Giulia sedan is so far unaffected by the Stelvio's delay. 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MORE: Everything Alfa Romeo Stelvio Content originally sourced from: The Alfa Romeo Stelvio may take an extended hiatus in Australia once stock of the existing model is exhausted, given the launch of the next-generation mid-size luxury SUV will reportedly be delayed until late 2026 in Europe. Such a delay would mean the second-generation SUV would be unlikely to arrive here until 2027. Reuters has cited sources saying first European deliveries of the new Stelvio will now not take place until September or October 2026, following the slowdown of electric vehicle (EV) demand globally. The next Stelvio was previously due to make its world debut in Italy later this year, ahead of first European deliveries in the first quarter of 2026. It was set to be offered exclusively with electric power, as part of a previously stated goal of Alfa Romeo's to switch to an EV-only lineup by 2027. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. However, the Italian brand cancelled its plans to become an EV-only brand in January. According to a March report, last month it was set to end production of all-petrol powered versions of both the current Stelvio and its Giulia sedan sister model, including the Quadrifoglio V6 flagships. The report said production will continue for diesel-powered Stelvio and Giulia variants, which haven't been sold in Australia for several years. According to a second Reuters source, Alfa Romeo is now developing a hybrid version of the next Stelvio, which was revealed in leaked images in April. The same source said it will take some time for the hybrid version to be developed, despite the new Stelvio being based on Stellantis' multi-powertrain STLA Large platform, and confirmed the planned 2026 launch of the next-generation Giulia sedan is so far unaffected by the Stelvio's delay. 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However, the American muscle car will soon also become available in North America with the Hurricane 3.0-litre twin-turbo straight-six petrol engine from the 2025 Ram 1500, which produces over 400kW in high-output form. It's unclear if this engine could make its way to the next Giulia and Stelvio. The current Giulia was launched in 2015, followed by the closely related Stelvio in 2016, and both models are currently available with a turbocharged 2.0-litre four-cylinder petrol engine outputting 206kW of power and 400Nm of torque in Ti and Veloce form. The range-topping Quadrifoglio versions pack a 375kW/600 2.9-litre twin-turbo petrol V6, which propels the BMW M3-rivalling rear-drive sedan to 100km/h in a claimed 3.8 seconds and the all-wheel drive SUV to 100km/h in a claimed 3.9 seconds. Ti, Veloce and Quadrifoglio versions of both models continue to be available in Australia, where a 2.2-litre turbo-diesel engine is no longer available despite continuing in Europe. 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BMW vs Geely: Brands in local fight over trademarks
BMW vs Geely: Brands in local fight over trademarks

The Advertiser

time13 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

BMW vs Geely: Brands in local fight over trademarks

The Geely EX5 mid-size electric SUV is already on sale, but a trademark dispute could force it to be renamed. Two months after acceptance of the 'Geely EX5' trademark was published by IP Australia on December 17, 2024, BMW submitted a notice of intention to oppose Geely's filing on February 17, 2025. It has until July 29, 2025 to provide evidence to support its opposition. It appears BMW's opposition to the nameplate is due to the similarity with its long-running X5 nameplate. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. "BMW Group protects its well established reputation in its premium products which are highly regarded and valued by consumers," said a BMW Group Australia spokesperson when asked about the trademark opposition. "We are aware of the application and are considering our options and do not otherwise wish to comment on the related legal processes." But no opposition has been recorded yet for a subsequent Geely filing made on December 23, 2024, of which acceptance was published on May 24, 2025, for simply 'EX5'. Geely has also filed to trademark 'Geely EX2' and 'Geely EX3', which may also fall afoul of BMW given it sells models wearing the X2, iX2, X3 and iX3 nameplates. "Geely Auto Australia is aware of an opposition regarding the trademark of one of its model names. As this is a legal matter, we will not be making any further comments at this stage," said a Geely Auto Australia spokesperson. The EX5 is known in China as the E5, and is sold under the Geely Galaxy sub-brand, which also offers the L7 electric vehicle (EV) and the Starship 7 EM-i plug-in hybrid (PHEV), the latter of which was recently spied testing in Australia. Galaxy branding isn't used here. Geely isn't the first automaker to find itself in a trademark dispute. Audi, for example, opposed trademark applications by Chinese brand Nio in 2023 for the ES6, ES7 and ES8 nameplates, which it argued would be "likely to deceive or cause confusion" and were "substantially identical or deceptively similar" trademarks to its own. The German brand sells vehicles under the S6, S7 and S8 nameplates. It was ultimately unsuccessful in forcing Nio to change its nameplates, though the Chinese brand nevertheless still has yet to enter the Australian market. MG is now launching vehicles with very similar nameplates to Audi models, with the MGS5 EV already on sale and the MGS6 EV due on sale here in 2026. Audi sells both S5 and S6 model variants. Audi didn't respond to our requests for comment following the publication of the MGS5 EV trademark earlier this year. We've also contacted the company about the subsequent filing for MGS6 EV. Content originally sourced from: The Geely EX5 mid-size electric SUV is already on sale, but a trademark dispute could force it to be renamed. Two months after acceptance of the 'Geely EX5' trademark was published by IP Australia on December 17, 2024, BMW submitted a notice of intention to oppose Geely's filing on February 17, 2025. It has until July 29, 2025 to provide evidence to support its opposition. It appears BMW's opposition to the nameplate is due to the similarity with its long-running X5 nameplate. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. "BMW Group protects its well established reputation in its premium products which are highly regarded and valued by consumers," said a BMW Group Australia spokesperson when asked about the trademark opposition. "We are aware of the application and are considering our options and do not otherwise wish to comment on the related legal processes." But no opposition has been recorded yet for a subsequent Geely filing made on December 23, 2024, of which acceptance was published on May 24, 2025, for simply 'EX5'. Geely has also filed to trademark 'Geely EX2' and 'Geely EX3', which may also fall afoul of BMW given it sells models wearing the X2, iX2, X3 and iX3 nameplates. "Geely Auto Australia is aware of an opposition regarding the trademark of one of its model names. As this is a legal matter, we will not be making any further comments at this stage," said a Geely Auto Australia spokesperson. The EX5 is known in China as the E5, and is sold under the Geely Galaxy sub-brand, which also offers the L7 electric vehicle (EV) and the Starship 7 EM-i plug-in hybrid (PHEV), the latter of which was recently spied testing in Australia. Galaxy branding isn't used here. Geely isn't the first automaker to find itself in a trademark dispute. Audi, for example, opposed trademark applications by Chinese brand Nio in 2023 for the ES6, ES7 and ES8 nameplates, which it argued would be "likely to deceive or cause confusion" and were "substantially identical or deceptively similar" trademarks to its own. The German brand sells vehicles under the S6, S7 and S8 nameplates. It was ultimately unsuccessful in forcing Nio to change its nameplates, though the Chinese brand nevertheless still has yet to enter the Australian market. MG is now launching vehicles with very similar nameplates to Audi models, with the MGS5 EV already on sale and the MGS6 EV due on sale here in 2026. Audi sells both S5 and S6 model variants. Audi didn't respond to our requests for comment following the publication of the MGS5 EV trademark earlier this year. We've also contacted the company about the subsequent filing for MGS6 EV. Content originally sourced from: The Geely EX5 mid-size electric SUV is already on sale, but a trademark dispute could force it to be renamed. Two months after acceptance of the 'Geely EX5' trademark was published by IP Australia on December 17, 2024, BMW submitted a notice of intention to oppose Geely's filing on February 17, 2025. It has until July 29, 2025 to provide evidence to support its opposition. It appears BMW's opposition to the nameplate is due to the similarity with its long-running X5 nameplate. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. "BMW Group protects its well established reputation in its premium products which are highly regarded and valued by consumers," said a BMW Group Australia spokesperson when asked about the trademark opposition. "We are aware of the application and are considering our options and do not otherwise wish to comment on the related legal processes." But no opposition has been recorded yet for a subsequent Geely filing made on December 23, 2024, of which acceptance was published on May 24, 2025, for simply 'EX5'. Geely has also filed to trademark 'Geely EX2' and 'Geely EX3', which may also fall afoul of BMW given it sells models wearing the X2, iX2, X3 and iX3 nameplates. "Geely Auto Australia is aware of an opposition regarding the trademark of one of its model names. As this is a legal matter, we will not be making any further comments at this stage," said a Geely Auto Australia spokesperson. The EX5 is known in China as the E5, and is sold under the Geely Galaxy sub-brand, which also offers the L7 electric vehicle (EV) and the Starship 7 EM-i plug-in hybrid (PHEV), the latter of which was recently spied testing in Australia. Galaxy branding isn't used here. Geely isn't the first automaker to find itself in a trademark dispute. Audi, for example, opposed trademark applications by Chinese brand Nio in 2023 for the ES6, ES7 and ES8 nameplates, which it argued would be "likely to deceive or cause confusion" and were "substantially identical or deceptively similar" trademarks to its own. The German brand sells vehicles under the S6, S7 and S8 nameplates. It was ultimately unsuccessful in forcing Nio to change its nameplates, though the Chinese brand nevertheless still has yet to enter the Australian market. MG is now launching vehicles with very similar nameplates to Audi models, with the MGS5 EV already on sale and the MGS6 EV due on sale here in 2026. Audi sells both S5 and S6 model variants. Audi didn't respond to our requests for comment following the publication of the MGS5 EV trademark earlier this year. We've also contacted the company about the subsequent filing for MGS6 EV. Content originally sourced from: The Geely EX5 mid-size electric SUV is already on sale, but a trademark dispute could force it to be renamed. Two months after acceptance of the 'Geely EX5' trademark was published by IP Australia on December 17, 2024, BMW submitted a notice of intention to oppose Geely's filing on February 17, 2025. It has until July 29, 2025 to provide evidence to support its opposition. It appears BMW's opposition to the nameplate is due to the similarity with its long-running X5 nameplate. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. "BMW Group protects its well established reputation in its premium products which are highly regarded and valued by consumers," said a BMW Group Australia spokesperson when asked about the trademark opposition. "We are aware of the application and are considering our options and do not otherwise wish to comment on the related legal processes." But no opposition has been recorded yet for a subsequent Geely filing made on December 23, 2024, of which acceptance was published on May 24, 2025, for simply 'EX5'. Geely has also filed to trademark 'Geely EX2' and 'Geely EX3', which may also fall afoul of BMW given it sells models wearing the X2, iX2, X3 and iX3 nameplates. "Geely Auto Australia is aware of an opposition regarding the trademark of one of its model names. As this is a legal matter, we will not be making any further comments at this stage," said a Geely Auto Australia spokesperson. The EX5 is known in China as the E5, and is sold under the Geely Galaxy sub-brand, which also offers the L7 electric vehicle (EV) and the Starship 7 EM-i plug-in hybrid (PHEV), the latter of which was recently spied testing in Australia. Galaxy branding isn't used here. Geely isn't the first automaker to find itself in a trademark dispute. Audi, for example, opposed trademark applications by Chinese brand Nio in 2023 for the ES6, ES7 and ES8 nameplates, which it argued would be "likely to deceive or cause confusion" and were "substantially identical or deceptively similar" trademarks to its own. The German brand sells vehicles under the S6, S7 and S8 nameplates. It was ultimately unsuccessful in forcing Nio to change its nameplates, though the Chinese brand nevertheless still has yet to enter the Australian market. MG is now launching vehicles with very similar nameplates to Audi models, with the MGS5 EV already on sale and the MGS6 EV due on sale here in 2026. Audi sells both S5 and S6 model variants. Audi didn't respond to our requests for comment following the publication of the MGS5 EV trademark earlier this year. We've also contacted the company about the subsequent filing for MGS6 EV. Content originally sourced from:

BMW vs Geely: Brands in local fight over trademarks
BMW vs Geely: Brands in local fight over trademarks

7NEWS

time14 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

BMW vs Geely: Brands in local fight over trademarks

The Geely EX5 mid-size electric SUV is already on sale, but a trademark dispute could force it to be renamed. Two months after acceptance of the 'Geely EX5' trademark was published by IP Australia on December 17, 2024, BMW submitted a notice of intention to oppose Geely's filing on February 17, 2025. It has until July 29, 2025 to provide evidence to support its opposition. It appears BMW's opposition to the nameplate is due to the similarity with its long-running X5 nameplate. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. 'BMW Group protects its well established reputation in its premium products which are highly regarded and valued by consumers,' said a BMW Group Australia spokesperson when asked about the trademark opposition. 'We are aware of the application and are considering our options and do not otherwise wish to comment on the related legal processes.' But no opposition has been recorded yet for a subsequent Geely filing made on December 23, 2024, of which acceptance was published on May 24, 2025, for simply 'EX5'. Geely has also filed to trademark 'Geely EX2' and 'Geely EX3', which may also fall afoul of BMW given it sells models wearing the X2, iX2, X3 and iX3 nameplates. 'Geely Auto Australia is aware of an opposition regarding the trademark of one of its model names. As this is a legal matter, we will not be making any further comments at this stage,' said a Geely Auto Australia spokesperson. The EX5 is known in China as the E5, and is sold under the Geely Galaxy sub-brand, which also offers the L7 electric vehicle (EV) and the Starship 7 EM-i plug-in hybrid (PHEV), the latter of which was recently spied testing in Australia. Galaxy branding isn't used here. Geely isn't the first automaker to find itself in a trademark dispute. Audi, for example, opposed trademark applications by Chinese brand Nio in 2023 for the ES6, ES7 and ES8 nameplates, which it argued would be 'likely to deceive or cause confusion' and were 'substantially identical or deceptively similar' trademarks to its own. The German brand sells vehicles under the S6, S7 and S8 nameplates. It was ultimately unsuccessful in forcing Nio to change its nameplates, though the Chinese brand nevertheless still has yet to enter the Australian market. MG is now launching vehicles with very similar nameplates to Audi models, with the MGS5 EV already on sale and the MGS6 EV due on sale here in 2026. Audi sells both S5 and S6 model variants.

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