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Toyota in decline in 2009?

3863 messages,  Last post on Dec 08, 2009 at 7:02 PM

You are in the Automotive News & Views Forum. Your Hosts are steve_ & claires

What is this discussion about? Toyota, Automotive News


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#3094 of 3863
Uhh... by iluvmysephia1
Nov 05, 2009 (4:31 pm)
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is it just me or is that a ridiculously high price for a vacuum cleaner? $1,350?
 
I could buy me some really nice duplicate Lancer floor mats for that price.
 
You know, just to have 'em around!
#3095 of 3863
By the way by andres3
Nov 05, 2009 (4:31 pm)
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I've never had any unintended acceleration in ANY vehicle by any manufacturer.
 
Unintended acceleration sounds like driver/operator error to me all the way.
 
And equipment malfunction in and of itself is no reason to cause an accident or injury. As many have said, the CHP is known by some in the loop to be incompetent in every way imaginable or listable, so it's no surprise to me that it was driver error in the Lexus in question.
 
There are many ways to slow down a vehicle, but it seems error, panick and ignorance got the best of some people out there.
#3096 of 3863
Re: Uhh... [iluvmysephia1] by andres3
Nov 05, 2009 (4:35 pm)
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Replying to: iluvmysephia1 (Nov 05, 2009 4:31 pm)

It is a very high price, but it is a very nice vacuum and has excellent reliability rankings. Kirby is like the Lexus of Vacuum cleaners.
 
However, the salesmen cry when you call it just a vacuum, they want you to know it's a SYSTEM, not just a vacuum cleaner.
 
It would have come with all sorts of attachments and gizmos to clean anything you can think of, including a shampooer mechanism.
 
They should probably lower the price to $999.99. I think they'd sell a lot more that way. But I guess there's enough suckers out there that'll pay $2,000+ that it's more profitable to gouge.
#3097 of 3863
Re: One only needs [andres3] by imidazol97
Nov 05, 2009 (4:55 pm)
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Replying to: andres3 (Nov 05, 2009 4:00 pm)

An area sweeper shop has Kirby at $899 and $749 for one that was "repossessed."
 
That includes all attachments including shampoo unit., IIRC>
#3098 of 3863
Re: By the way [andres3] by 210delray
Nov 05, 2009 (5:33 pm)
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Replying to: andres3 (Nov 05, 2009 4:31 pm)

I once experienced my Volvo 240's engine revving up unexpectedly while I was braking for a red light. This was near the height of the Audi 5000 hysteria, but before the 60 Minutes broadcast. But I had a manual transmission car, so there was no drama in bringing the car to a stop with the help of the 3rd pedal.
 
I even reported it to NHTSA, and someone from the agency later called me back to query me about the incident.
 
Months later, I realized what likely had happened. I was wearing boots that day, and these had wider soles than my dress shoes or sneakers. The right edge of the sole had caught the gas pedal while I was depressing the brake pedal.
#3099 of 3863
Re: By the way [210delray] by kdhspyder
Nov 05, 2009 (5:50 pm)
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Replying to: 210delray (Nov 05, 2009 5:33 pm)

From a former crash scene investigator ...TheCarConnection reports on CR tests on braking with WOT
 
After the interesting article..
As a Crash Scene Investigator (CxSI), I have an advantage: I previously was the Auto Safety Engineer for Consumer Reports. There, I test drove the Audi 5000 when it was new. I knew that this car had large wide tires to accommodate the powerful 5 cylinder engine. There is a bulge on the left side of the space for the brake and accelerator pedals. This displaced the pedals toward the center of the car more than on most automobiles because of the wide tires. Because of that lateral shift, it was easy to press on the accelerator pedal with the right side of your foot while also pressing on the brake pedal. It occurred to me that drivers, especially older drivers with degraded hearing, would start the car and place it in gear quickly, without hearing the engine revving much faster than idle. Then when the car took off, they pressed hard on the accelerator, thinking it was only the brake pedal.
What do we know about other cars that had unexpected acceleration like this? A CSxI who is working with a possible client has a demonstration to show that the problem was misplacement of the driver’s right foot. I could take almost any car with an automatic transmission to show how unlikely a real runaway would be. Even if the car had a powerful V-8 I would start the engine and shift into Drive normally. Then with my left foot on the brake pedal, we would mash the accelerator pedal. The driven tires might begin to spin and make blue smoke but the car would remain in place. All four wheels had locked brakes, but the engine was overpowering only two of them. The front brake and tires were very effective if we started that with the car not moving. If I attempted this demonstration when the car was going 60 mph, overcoming the inertia would be more difficult – maybe impossible.
I could get a runaway under another scenario. If we pumped the brake pedal while the engine was revving hard, that would deplete the power-brake vacuum booster reservoir. Then the brake effect would be like having non-power brakes – requiring greatly increased pedal force to hold the car back. That was good reason to adopt another means of assuring that the brake booster is not dependent upon engine intake vacuum. Audi did that.
We proved that the “ghost under the hood” was not real. Runaways were the result of careless drivers. True, the Audi made the error more likely with the weirdly placed pedals. None of this seemed to affect the adverse publicity generated by the TV show “60 Minutes”. The result was greatly reduced sales for Audi. Another result of this scandal was the adoption of the brake-shift interlock mechanism that made it necessary to depress the (real) brake pedal in order to get the gear shift out of Park.
#3100 of 3863
Re: By the way [210delray] by kdhspyder by imidazol97
Nov 05, 2009 (6:21 pm)
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So this post is saying the state patrol officer had his foot on the accelerator and the brake in the ES?
 
Otherwise the article is nicely written, may be true or not true, but has no relevance to the Toyota at hand.
#3101 of 3863
And.. by iluvmysephia1
Nov 05, 2009 (7:58 pm)
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it still doesn't excuse the servicing dealer for plopping an extra mat over the other one, eh? What's the point there? Covering up a muddy mat with a clean one from the wrong Toyota vehicle? Or what? Seems simple, but that mistake shouldn't be repeated over again.
#3102 of 3863
Re: And.. [iluvmysephia1] by steve_ HOST
Nov 05, 2009 (8:01 pm)
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Replying to: iluvmysephia1 (Nov 05, 2009 7:58 pm)

Sometimes the mistakes just pile up. Maybe it was all just the mat. But maybe it was the mat, plus the on/off switch that was unfamiliar to the driver, plus overheated brakes, plus everything else.
 
If it had just been one of these things by itself, maybe the wreck could have been avoided.
#3103 of 3863
Re: And.. [steve_] by kdhspyder
Nov 05, 2009 (8:21 pm)
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Replying to: steve_ (Nov 05, 2009 8:01 pm)

If the All Weather mats had not been put into the car incorrectly ( at all ) by the Lexus dealer that officer and his family would likely still be alive.

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