possible electrical fire in 2019 GT

Lane DeNicola

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Hi all, hope I'm posting this to the right spot!

Last May I leased a 2019 GT from a dealer in the metro Atlanta area. To date I've put less than 12k miles on it and have kept up with the servicing, including (about two months ago) getting the brake rotors replaced to deal with vibration during firm braking (thanks to the advice on this forum)! That was the most recent servicing I've had done, and never had any accidents, fender-benders, or mechanical issues beyond slight brake vibration. I'm not exactly a wizard on the thing's tech specs but have *loved* every mile I've put on it.

Tuesday of this week (4/14/20) I took a drive to pick up some groceries, under 8 miles roundtrip. Immediately on starting it up when I came out of the store I got a "check ECS" indication on the dash, something I hadn't seen previously. As I pulled out of the lot this was followed up by a "check tire pressure system" message. I took the first few turns on the route home wondering what the issue was, then got a chemical-y whiff of something. Within a minute I got a (much more catastrophic-looking) "ADVISE FULL ENGINE DIAGNOSTIC" warning on the central A/V touchscreen, and noticed visible vapor coming from the A/C vent. Suddenly the acceleration seemed severely dampened, so less than two miles from the store I pulled off on to the shoulder, turned it off, and popped the hood.

Some smoke was issuing from the rear passenger's side of the engine compartment. I waited for a few moments to see if it would dissipate, but instead the smoke turned into flames inside of a minute. I backed off a bit (having nothing handy to contend with a fire) and up it went!. Standing 50' to the thing's rear I dialed 911 on my cell and watched the flames leap around the opened hood. After a couple more minutes the horn went off, followed by a nasty chorus of other ungodly sounds from the engine compartment. The county fire department showed up to put it out, opening all four doors to vent the interior which was thick with dark smoke. Looking it over they observed the fire seemed to begin in the rear passenger's quarter of the engine compartment, where a fuse panel and much of the densest wiring reside. A call from an insurance appraiser this morning confirmed at least $20k worth of damage just in what he could see initially so they've totaled it. I got a few snapshots after all the real action was over, but no good ones of the engine compartment itself (looks like I can't post these as a new member).

Obviously I'm now doing a little poking around and seeing the NHTSA probe, the recall on the 2018 Stingers due to electrical harness fire risks, etc. However, I'm not seeing anything regarding similar problems with the 2019s. Anyone have anything additional on this? I'd love to stick with them but I'd be a little leery if this seemed to be a pattern. Any questions/advice are actively solicited!
 
The wiring harness recall was for possible chafing of a harness on the driver's side, where it passed through an opening in the metal without a grommet to protect it. I've never heard of any car fires until your story, from the harness in the recall or anything else.

Sounds like a highly unusual, one off experience to me - good thing it didn't happen in your garage! I wouldn't have any concerns about going with the same car again - well, not exactly THAT car ... :thumbup:
 
This is only the second Stinger up in flames that I've heard about. The first one was summer of 2019. And that was apparently attributed to a "rear fuse panel" short. So, taken separately, each of these is a "once off" since they don't originate from the same cause. I never did hear of an actual flameout from the wiring harness rubbing danger; so, I think that this is proof that Kia is on top of any fire hazard that crops up: and the wire harness rub was the only TSB for fire hazards.
stinger rear fuse panel fire.webp

(And welcome, by the way, even though you've been signed up for almost a year. :D)
 
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This is only the second Stinger up in flames that I've heard about. The first one was summer of 2019. And that was apparently attributed to a "rear fuse panel" short. So, taken separately, each of these is a "once off" since they don't originate from the same cause. I never did hear of an actual flameout from the wiring harness rubbing danger; so, I think that this is proof that Kia is on top of any fire hazard that crops up: and the wire harness rub was the only TSB for fire hazards.
View attachment 40583

(And welcome, by the way, even though you've been signed up for almost a year. :D)

Thanks! And uh, yes...I signed up energetically when a friend first told me about it and then got so caught up in the driving I never made it back (until now), leaving me a shameless lurker. :whistle:
 
unfortunately, these things do happen. you are okay, not injured, that is a plus. insurance knows that it isn't owner fault, big plus. as for getting another stinger, I would. as any of the members here will attest, the minor issues that have occurred, your car on fire not withstanding, are just that, minor. for a first year design, no updates, there really haven't been any major issues. yes, your car caught fire, and like merlin posted, it is a one off. kia has been on the ball taking care of any problem when it pops up. post some pics of your replacement stinger when you take delivery of it.
 
From interior to exterior to high performance - everything you need for your Stinger awaits you...
2018 Stingers!

Wrong side of vehicle and 2019 not affected.

You're the first member here to report a fire. Only two mentions since 2017 and they were just pics or videos from facebook or similar, no details from owners.
 
I have seen more than 2 burnt stingers on Copart. No other damage, just burst into flames. I just hope that mine won't be one of them. Glad no one was hurt in the fire.
 
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