FILE PHOTO: A sign with the TAKATA logo is seen outside the Takata Corporation building in Auburn Hills, Michigan May 20, 2015. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook/File Photo

WILMINGTON, Del. (Reuters) - Key Safety Systems has agreed to terms on the $1.6 billion purchase of assets of Takata Corp 7312.T, stricken by a recall of its faulty vehicle air bags, and final documents will be signed in less than two weeks, a lawyer for Takata's U.S. unit said on Monday.

Takata and its U.S. unit, TK Holdings Inc, filed for bankruptcy in June and the asset sale to Key Safety Systems, or KSS, is the cornerstone of its plan to raise funds to compensate automakers and drivers.

Marcia Goldstein, a lawyer for TK Holdings, told a U.S. bankruptcy judge on Monday that a U.S. deal had been reached and was being reviewed by lawyers in Japan, Germany and elsewhere.

“The documentation is fully negotiated, subject only to what all the lawyers agree is clean up,” said Goldstein, an attorney with the Weil, Gotshal & Manges law firm.

The sale must be approved by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware, as well as regulators.

TK Holdings said when it filed for bankruptcy that final papers on sale to KSS, a Michigan-based parts supplier owned by China's Ningbo Joyson Electronic Corp 600699.SS, would be provided within "a few weeks."

Takata in February pleaded in a U.S. federal court to a felony charge as part of a $1 billion settlement that included compensation funds for automakers and victims of its faulty air bag inflators. Under the settlement, the sale to Key Safety Systems must close by Feb. 27.

Takata faces tens of billions of dollars in costs and liabilities resulting from almost a decade of recalls and lawsuits. Its air bag inflators have been linked to at least 16 deaths and 180 injuries around the world because they can rupture and send metal fragments flying.

KSS plans to take over Takata’s viable operations, while the remaining operations will be reorganized to continue churning out millions of replacement inflators, the two firms said.