NHTSA is investigating 195,000 2013 Nissan Rogues due to an airbag inflation problem.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration opened two probes involving more than 200,000 Chrysler and Nissan vehicles.

The safety agency is examining 195,000 2013 Nissan Rogue models due to airbag problems after receiving two complaints about the deployment times of the devices. In both cases, the airbags inflated slowly, taking as long as a minute to inflate, and did not fully inflate. Additionally, both devices deployed several seconds – more than a minute in one case – after the crash.

Additionally, NHTSA is looking to 50,000 2015 Jeep Cherokees for fire risks. The report in this case stemmed from an incident in San Diego, which was captured by a local news crew. The vehicle began smoking right after it was parked and within minutes it was fully engulfed in flames – some nearly 20 feet high – and was a total loss. No injuries were reported.

A complaint was filed with the agency. The Jeep was purchased on Jan. 2 from in National City, Calif., and had been driven less than 100 miles on Jan. 4 when the driver noticed an oil smell. Additionally, the complaint noted that there was either burning oil or fuel running 50 yards down the street.

A second complaint was filed on Jan. 5 said an owner of a 2015 Jeep Cherokee, while driving at 60 miles per hour, noticed smoke under the hood. The SUV only had 45 miles on it. Chrysler is working with federal officials regarding the inquiry.

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NHTSA’s quick response isn’t a surprise as the agency was heavily criticized last year for being too complacent in its investigatory efforts. Officials rebuffed the criticism saying it was undermanned and underfunded, making it difficult to spot the problems in the reporting.

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It also noted that automakers also failed to report problems in a timely manner, further confounding the efforts of the agency to spot trends with certain vehicles and affecting investigations or recalls on those vehicles.

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The auto industry set a new record for recalls in 2014 with more than 60 million vehicles being subject to actions. General Motors was the leader of the pack with nearly 30 million vehicles recalled.

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