Infotainment Defects Under Massachusetts Lemon Law
Touchscreen failures, navigation crashes, Bluetooth / CarPlay issues — infotainment defects qualifying under § 7N½.
Infotainment defects are a frequent Massachusetts Lemon Law category. Many qualify under § 7N½’s substantial-impairment test when they affect safety-critical functions (HVAC, backup camera, navigation, cluster display).
Common qualifying infotainment defects
- Touchscreen freezes / crashes — substantial impairment (HVAC, audio, navigation controls inaccessible).
- Backup camera failures — categorical safety issue.
- Navigation system failures.
- Apple CarPlay / Android Auto repeated failures.
- Bluetooth pairing failures.
- Voice command failures.
- Climate control via touchscreen failures — critical in New England winter.
- Cluster display defects.
- OTA update failures bricking systems.
Manufacturer patterns
- GM Infotainment 3 / GMC IPS5 issues.
- Stellantis Uconnect 5 crashes.
- Ford SYNC 4 stability issues.
- Tesla MCU2 known degradation.
- Hyundai/Kia infotainment crashes.
- BMW iDrive 8 early-build issues.
TSB / OTA overlay
Most infotainment defects have TSB or OTA history. Pull:
- Service bulletin history.
- OTA update logs.
- Module reflash records.
- NHTSA TSB database for VIN.
When infotainment becomes safety-related
Infotainment defects qualify as safety issues when they:
- Disable backup camera (federally-mandated rear visibility).
- Affect cluster display / speedometer.
- Disable HVAC defroster controls in winter (critical in Massachusetts).
- Cause unintended audio at maximum volume (safety distraction).
- Affect emergency call system.
How thresholds apply
Same § 7N½ thresholds.
What strengthens an infotainment claim
- Video documentation of crashes / freezes.
- TSB / OTA pattern.
- Module reflash history showing repeated failed attempts.
- Class-action history — supports c. 93A willfulness.
What weakens an infotainment claim
- Aftermarket head units voiding warranty.
- Modified software (jailbroken systems).
- Bluetooth pairing issues that are device-side (consumer’s phone).
- “No problem found” without persistent symptom.
Bottom line
Infotainment defects can be valid Lemon Law claims, particularly when failures affect safety-critical functions like backup cameras or HVAC defroster controls (especially important in Massachusetts winters). Document video evidence, secure TSB / OTA pattern, and pursue § 7N½ thresholds.
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