The seat belt retractor internal car sensor may not function as intended. In the event of an accident, the retractors could fail to lock and in such circumstances the seatbelt would not restrain the occupant.
The recall affects vehicles produced between 26. 9. 2017 – 3. 10. 2017.
Source: Alert 15/2018 A12/0530/18
What the owner should do?
If you read about a recall that you think may affect your car, the motor industry standards body Motor Codes offers a Vehicle Safety Recall search. By using this, any recalls that are active for your car can be identified. To use this facility, you’ll need the Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) for your car – this is a long code number that appears on the chassis plate of your car or – on most UK-registered cars – in the bottom-left corner of your windscreen.
If it’s confirmed there’s an active recall for your car, you should make contact with a Nissan dealer or workshop that’s been officially authorised to perform repairs on behalf of the manufacturer. Usually that’ll be your nearest franchised dealership, or ‘main dealer’ as they’re sometimes known.