TPMS “Repair” Led to Tire Blowout—Negligence That Could - ncova001
TPMS “Repair” Led to Tire Blowout—Negligence That Could Have Killed My Partner
On Monday, July 14, my partner brought our 2025 Honda Accord to Hall Honda Virginia Beach for a TPMS warning light this was Visit #1. The repair was completed under warranty and marked ready by 12:24 PM. We picked the car up the next morning, Tuesday, July 15 at 7:30 AM. Just nine hours later, at 4:32 PM, the tire’s sidewall blew out without warning while my partner was driving to ODU. There was no TPMS alert, no impact, no pothole, just sudden catastrophic failure.
If this had happened at highway speed, she could be dead. That’s not an exaggeration. This wasn’t an inconvenience it was a life-threatening failure hours after the dealership released the vehicle.
We had the car towed back after hours that evening Visit #2. The next morning, Tito, the service advisor, said we “must have hit something.” I didn’t argue. I let it go because he also told me that the tire replacement and rim work were fully covered under warranty and then gave me two options: a fast-track repair using a third party, or the “proper” route that would take three days. Since it was covered, I didn’t press the issue and chose the "proper" fix.
But then came Visit #3. We picked the car up on Monday, July 21. By Tuesday, July 22 at 3 PM, the TPMS system failed again, this time throwing a calibration warning yet another return trip. At this point, my frustration was not with the blowout itself it was with the fact that we had to return three times for what should have been a basic sensor repair. I came in to express concern over the repeated service failures and the lack of thoroughness.
Instead of addressing the real issue, the service manager spoke to Tito who immediately got aggressive, once again insisting we caused the blowout saying he "took photos". I wasn’t even there to argue about the tire blowout. But now he and his manager, who was just as defensive and condescending, turned the whole conversation into a hostile blame game.
They showed no concern that the vehicle was returned to us in an unsafe condition. No concern that my partner’s life was put at risk. No apology for the inconvenience, the transportation costs I had to pay out of pocket, or the wasted time. Instead, they made it clear that preserving their version of events mattered more than accountability or safety.
Let’s be absolutely clear:
The rim chip came from the rim contacting pavement after the tire failed, under full vehicle weight and torque.
The black scuffing is consistent with rotation on bare metal not from hitting an object.
There was no structural rim damage, no lateral cracking, and no TPMS alert. This failure was the result of either a defective tire or a botched TPMS service not driver error.
This is not just bad service. This is negligence. This is a failure to properly service a safety-critical system. This is a pattern of blame-shifting, evasion, and disrespect toward a paying customer. This is how someone ends up seriously injured or dead because a dealership failed to do its job.
Yes, everything was covered under warranty. But a warranty doesn’t mean anything when the work is careless and the staff treats safety like an afterthought. We were lucky. But if this same failure happens to someone else at 70 mph, there will be blood on this dealership’s hands.
Avoid Hall Honda Virginia Beach. Don’t trust their service department. Don’t let their smiles in the sales office fool you. And don’t believe the warranty will protect you when what you really need is competence and accountability. Because based on our experience, they offer neither.
Ps. They really don't deserve it but I give them two stars because the gentleman who calibrated the TPMS sensor was polite
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