1996 FORD WINDSTAR — Complaint #478654
Open-data reference.
NHTSA Complaint about CHILD SEAT:HARNESS BUCKLE:CONVERTIBLE filed June 7, 2004
NHTSA complaint #478654 (ODI reference 10075796) concerns a 1996 FORD WINDSTAR and was filed on June 7, 2004. The owner reports the failure occurred on June 7, 2004. The report was geocoded to New Hampshire based on the filer's self-reported location. The affected component is categorized as child seat:harness buckle:convertible, one of NHTSA's standardized taxonomy codes used to group defect patterns across make, model, and year.
The filer flagged the following severity indicators: crash: no, fire: no, injuries: 0, fatalities: 0. No crash, fire, or fatality was associated with this report, which places it in the early-warning stream rather than the priority-review stream. Because a VIN was supplied, this complaint is tied to a specific vehicle and not just a model-year cohort.
Individual complaints are consumer-submitted and unverified by NHTSA engineers — the agency's role at this stage is to collect, index, and make them searchable. What matters for federal action is the pattern: when many owners of the same FORD WINDSTAR cohort independently describe similar child seat:harness buckle:convertible failures, defect investigators have grounds to open a PE and request manufacturer data. Related filings for the same vehicle and component appear below, and the detail page for the full 1996 FORD WINDSTAR shows the complete component-level complaint distribution alongside any active investigations or recalls.
Complaint Description
EVENFLO MODEL # 263120-P1, WHEN THE CONSUMER PUSHED THE RELEASE BUTTON TO RELEASE THE STRAPS THE STRAP BUCKLE FELL COMPLETELY APART. THE CLIP WAS STILL HOLDING THE CHILD SAFELY BUT THE CONSUMER COULD NOT REMOVE THE CHILD NORMALLY. *AK
Complaint Details
| NHTSA Complaint ID | 478654 |
| ODI Number | 10075796 |
| Date Filed | June 7, 2004 |
| Failure Date | June 7, 2004 |
| VIN | PLEASE PROV |
Source: NHTSA Vehicle Complaints Database. Component taxonomy and severity codes are standardized by NHTSA Office of Defects Investigation.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.