TOKYO — The president of Mitsubishi Materials apologized on Friday for the latest breach of quality standards to rattle corporate Japan after the company said it had falsified inspection data for components it sold to manufacturers of cars, aircraft and industrial equipment.

“I deeply apologize for causing great trouble to many customers and shareholders,” the president, Akira Takeuchi, said at a news conference, bowing deeply alongside other executives.

Mitsubishi Materials said the components it sold, including rubber seals used in aircraft and automobiles, met legally mandated safety standards and were therefore not dangerous. Still, the revelation is a fresh blow to Japan’s reputation for scrupulous high-quality manufacturing, following admissions of similarly deceptive practices at Kobe Steel.

Mitsubishi Materials faces additional scrutiny over the timing of its disclosure. The company said managers at one of three subsidiaries where the deception occurred became aware of the data falsification in February after an internal inspection, but they did not report the issue to superiors at the parent company until October. It took another month for Mitsubishi Materials to acknowledge the problem publicly.