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Toyota in decline in 2009?

3586 messages,  Last post on Nov 26, 2009 at 2:40 PM

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What is this discussion about? Toyota, Automotive News


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#3140 of 3586
Re: what to do? [lemko] by andre1969
Nov 06, 2009 (12:35 pm)
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Replying to: lemko (Nov 06, 2009 12:14 pm)

Of course, if you tried it with an old Torqueflite, the transmission might survive too!
 
Try that with an old pushbutton Torqueflite, at least the 1957 model, and it wouldn't work. At any forward speed greater than 10 mph it just goes into neutral as a safety feature. Or at least, it's supposed to. I never tried it out on my DeSoto, and I'm not about to!
 
I do know from experience though, that throwing a '68 Dart into park at a forward speed of roughly 30 mph will stop it almost immediately. And stall it out. But thankfully, do no permanent damage (at least, that one time it happened it didn't)
#3141 of 3586
Re: gagrice... [mcdawgg] by nippononly
Nov 06, 2009 (12:56 pm)
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Replying to: mcdawgg (Nov 06, 2009 10:24 am)

It seems now that people want Toyota to engineer for ignorance, to put it nicely. You might as well just stop selling cars!!
 
No absolutely not, false conclusion. There is plenty of money to be made in car manufacturing, even for an ignorant customer base. Just look at all the fuss around child car seats these last few years, instructions all over the inside of the car AND the outside of the car seat, still AAA regularly publishes estimates that over 50% of them are mounted improperly.
 
Point is, they slapped stickers and warnings everywhere, added gear (LATCH system) to every car sold to try and make it easier for the consumer (whose life is much too busy to make sure that his/her kids are safely installed in the car by reading the manual of either the car or the child seat), and they go right on selling cars at a tidy profit. When that first improperly secured child goes rocketing onto the interstate, they will have lots of evidence to show the judge that they took extra precautions to keep that kid safe.
 
Toyota has to assume the American consumer is even more ignorant than their current assumptions, and engineer accordingly, as do all car manufacturers.
#3142 of 3586
Re: I wonder... [gagrice] by imidazol97
Nov 06, 2009 (1:01 pm)
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Replying to: gagrice (Nov 06, 2009 12:31 pm)

There were Tacoma acceleration out-of-control posts in the posts following an article. Of course a Toyota person will claim 101% of those were lies, but have there been Tacoma problems also with UA (Unintended Acceleration)?
 
Googling "toyota tacoma acceleration problem"
or
"'Toyota throttle problems"
 
gave
 
lots of links to Tacoma problems with UA:
 
toyota tacoma acceleration problem
in toyotanation which amusingly had all kinds of Toyota floor mats ads on it!!!
 
One person in the RAV4 discussion said,
"I did look up throttle problems and as a result my dealership had a Toyota engineer from Boston come up to Maine to inspect my vehicle. At one point while I was driving the Rav started to act up when I lightly pressed the accelerator while proceeding out of an intersection. The engineer said my computer was "confused" and that was due to "applied learning" by the computer. He said it has a "memory" and if you are lead foot it will remember that after 5-6 hours of driving and will try to respond accordingly. I said then why isn't it consistent every time I step on the gas I am not a lead foot anyway] and what about all the city drivers who need to be quick on the pedal, why aren't they having my issues. He changed the subject. He drove it for the afternoon and of course it wouldn't act up. He concluded it was due to the all season rubber mats I bought thru Toyota even tho I told him the problem occured when there was no floor mat at all. While we were driving I had him try with his foot to get that rubber mat to budge and he couldn't do it. He told me not to use the $100.00 mats anyway I bought from Toyota and he will see that they give me free of charge a set of factory floor mats. I said he was insane and now I knew Toyota was trying to kill me if they want to give me the very floor mats that they are blaming for my problem and what caused the death of that family this past summer. He said not to worry that they will be permenently secured to the seat. Since when does my floor mat need a seatbelt??? I really am out of viable options now and must pray that someone else brings it to their attention before I or anyone else get killed. Consumer affarirs.com has since received numerous complaints from new Prius owners complaining of the same problem"
 
the Toyota rep told the owner it was "confused" computer due to its memory...
 
Kind of interesting... that the guy changed the subject to floor mats to avoid the real question that's the elephant behind the tree: Is it a computer problem?
 
#3143 of 3586
Re: I wonder... [imidazol97] by larsb
Nov 06, 2009 (1:11 pm)
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Replying to: imidazol97 (Nov 06, 2009 1:01 pm)

There have been UA cases for nearly all automakers.
 
Virtually every one of them has been proven, when tested in court, to be "driver error."
 
Certainly and of course not saying that EVERY SINGLE ONE of them has been, but many of them are.
#3144 of 3586
Re: I wonder... [imidazol97] by imidazol97
Nov 06, 2009 (1:19 pm)
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Replying to: imidazol97 (Nov 06, 2009 1:01 pm)

>Injuryboard.com
 
By October 2009, Toyota was forced to finally acknowledge sudden acceleration problems in the following vehicles:
 
2007-2010 Toyota Camry
2005-2010 Toyota Avalon
2004-2009 Toyota Prius
2005-2010 Toyota Tacoma
2007-2010 Toyota Tundra
2007-2010 Lexus ES350
2006-2010 Lexus IS250
2006-2010 Lexus IS 350
 
>WASHINGTON -- A relatively new technology, the electronic throttle, is a leading suspect in a wave of claims that some vehicles unexpectedly accelerate out of control. Government investigators are looking at 2002-03 Toyota Camrys and Solaras and Lexus ES 300s to determine if they are defective. More than a million cars are in service. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has begun a preliminary investigation of the latest claims. It is gathering about 37 complaints of sudden acceleration by owners of the Toyota and Lexus cars. The complaints include 30 reports of crashes. They involved injuries to five people; one of them was seriously hurt.
 
According to AutoSafety.org, by the year 2000, there had been more than 22,600 reported complaints of sudden acceleration.
 
More than five years ago, Toyota and NHTSA identified the electronic throttle as the most likely source of the sudden acceleration defect. However, Toyota continued -- and continues today -- to dismiss concerns about its throttle control system and has looked only at the floor mat issue.b>
#3145 of 3586
Re: And.. [kdhspyder] by explorerx4
Nov 06, 2009 (3:17 pm)
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Replying to: kdhspyder (Nov 05, 2009 8:21 pm)

yes you are correct.
throw that mat into just about any other vehicle on top of what was already on the floor, and those same people are still alive.
#3146 of 3586
Re: what to do? [gagrice] by andres3
Nov 06, 2009 (3:23 pm)
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Replying to: gagrice (Nov 06, 2009 7:10 am)

Hard to believe a La Mesa PD officer would rear-end me, but it happens. In fact, I'd argue that most CHP and police officer's are lousier drivers than the people they ticket most of the time.
#3147 of 3586
Re: I wonder... [gagrice] by kdhspyder
Nov 06, 2009 (4:05 pm)
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Replying to: gagrice (Nov 06, 2009 12:31 pm)

These are 'reports'. They might be accurate or they might not be. Do you have any facts; actual evidence verified by the NHTSA or some other neutral agency? These could have been written by you.
 
When you can bring actual evidence from an impartial agency or company showing data confirming such instances then I'll believe them. Data and facts are the only arbiters. To balance out these 'reports' let me make the following 25,000 'reports'...seriously.
 
In the 10 yrs working here we've handled at least 25,000 new vehicles. Neither I nor anyone at this location has ever run into an unintended acceleration issue. Not only that but neither has our Chevy store, our Honda store nor our Hyundai store ever run into any such issue.
 
Based on this experience I'm calling BS on the other reports. Show me I'm wrong with factual evidence.
#3148 of 3586
Re: I wonder... [imidazol97] by kdhspyder
Nov 06, 2009 (4:12 pm)
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Replying to: imidazol97 (Nov 06, 2009 1:01 pm)

He drove it for the afternoon and of course it wouldn't act up.
 
This is a surprise? I believe that the poster was complaining about the throttle / gearing logic not unintended acceleration.
#3149 of 3586
Re: what to do? [andres3] by explorerx4
Nov 06, 2009 (4:15 pm)
Reply

Replying to: andres3 (Nov 06, 2009 3:23 pm)

so you are expanding from complaining about chryslers?

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