Edmunds dealer partner, Bayway Leasing, is now offering transparent lease deals via these forums. Click here to see the latest vehicles!
Popular New Cars
Popular Used Sedans
Popular Used SUVs
Popular Used Pickup Trucks
Popular Used Hatchbacks
Popular Used Minivans
Popular Used Coupes
Popular Used Wagons
Comments
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
Make it look to the public as if Toyota/etc was "doing the right thing" while in the background trying to keep the real cause well hidden from public view.
"..is the Denso pedal safe or not?..."
Yes, the problem lies elsewhere.
I'm also wondering if there are two versions of the Denso pedal, one made in Japan and one in the US. In another thread one poster referred to the pedal as a Denso(US). This whole thing just gets more confusing.
I don't think they have brains, at least brains to understand cars and driving..
I was off for awhile myself. As for Dave Gilbert's test. No, he did not shut off the car. Here is the link. Yesterday committee was quite interested in hearing from Dave Gilbert. Lots of questions. Today Toyota tried to gently downgrade Gilbert's test results saying he spliced wired together. Go to this link and hopefully this will help.
http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/toyota-recall-electronic-design-flaw-linked-toyota- -runaway-acceleration-problems/story?id=9909319
Sean Kane is founder of Safety Research & Strategies, Vehicle Safety Information Resource Center, publishes Safety Record, Co-Chair CDC sponsored Mass. Prevent Injury Now Network
Dave Gilbert is Professor University of Illinois Auto Technology Department
Guess I am not only one that feels Exponent that Toyota hired to defend their electronics is questionable. One congressman also indicated such - but didn't come out and say anything. Body language only. Today former NHTSA director Clayburn did come out and say Exponent is a defense firm. Of course she couldn't publicly criticize them too much. One congressman did, but legally she had to walk around the question. This congressman had no idea who Exponont was??? Unbelievable!! Sure Exponent is very good, it's just the questionable reports they defend with. So far there are now five recently that feel same way as I do.
Here are couple of links about Exponent and what they were involved in here in California. PGE was despicable, and my feelings about Exponent are not far behind. One is USA article 2005 describing the PGE - chromium law suit & note section at bottom - explains the fraud scientific study. Second is report by David Egilman MD, MPH, SCOUT, PHD - Corporate Corruption of Science - The Case of Chromium (VI). You do have to read report to find PGE hired Exponent - and also to find where Exponenet and their former Vice President Dennis Paustenbach worked together to write this fraudulant scientific study. Have more saved too..
http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/energy/2006-02-06-pge-settlement-brocko- vich_x.htm
http://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/files/IJOEH_1202_Egilman.pdf
So now I ask why did Toyota go to Exponent??? Seems they need some engineers to write report they have no electronic problems. It does not take a genius to realize just what Toyota is up to. I already know of Exponent and what they do. Is Exponent going to falsify reports??
That he did, but apparently not "tight" enough, not a low enough resistance in the splice, to get the idiot "monitor" to notice that the two signal swere too close to equal.
When the two signals will normally be 0.8 volts apart a test of 0.02 volts is beyond reason. At first I thought it might be a typo but both the 2004 and 2010 RXes have the same specification.
Yeah, but big deal. He owns a company, you know? You and I can do that too - poof, I just founded Boise Behicle Bothers and for a fee, I'll send your email to a lawyer I know. Just call me the BBB for short.
I'm more curious about his degrees and where he went to school. All I really know is that he worked for Nader. He aggregates data, but is he a statistician or lawyer or more like a paralegal?
Mr. Gilbert is, I think, a master's level associate professor and also has his mechanic's certification from ASE. I linked to his vita around here the other day, and his credentials are out there (and are pretty good I think). Kane, I'm still not so sure about. Maybe he's a drop-out, but so was Bill Gates. It'd just be nice to know.
http://www.ewg.org/featured/219
But it is nice to see some advocacy groups sticking up for consumer safety issues. At least a balance is maintained. Win some and lose some.
http://www.latimes.com/business/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-us-toyota-supplier-inves- - tigation,0,4943178.story
http://jalopnik.com/5479384/breaking-fbi-raids-three-toyota-suppliers-in-detroit- -
Nice timing by the FBI on the Denso raid. Raid is reported to have nothing to do with the safety issue. hmm.
That would really be refreshing, and truly send a message that they take responsibility for their actions, and will be proactive in rectifying them.
Unless Toyota has given the dealers some unknown incentives to move the cars (something Edmunds could investigate, perhaps?), the prices on them today were the same prices you would have received a month ago.
Also, again just an observation of the Toyota dealers around me, they seemed to have shifted their focus more to the used car side by stocking their used lot, in some cases 2X the stock they had before. Maybe that's how they're weathering this storm until there's a final resolution.
No matter. Only one way to find out how price sensitive the dealers are on new Toyotas. Go into their showroom and make a ridiculous offer and see how far they're willing to go.
Still, on a personal basis, regardless of price, I'd want to see how this shakes out before I'd even set foot in a Toyota dealership. I'd personally be very frustrated that after the dust clears, I'd have to take my new car back for some sort of additional recall.
If they match past performance locally on their sticker price and fees:
They'll have an ADM sticker for extra because of the cost of having the Japanese owner come here to testify.
They'll have an advertising charge because of all the free advertising they have gotten through the last several mnths.
They'll have charge for driving a potentially dangerous vehicle off the delivery semi because it put their workers at risk.
And they'll have an extra charge for their extra costs in having more mechanics employed and working longer hours to repair the cars toyota delivered to them and millions of customers.
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
I was really pulling for Toyota, but have became upset as facts unraveled. Now I have many reservations. Words have little meaning, past, present, ongoing actions and true/real facts speak volumns. And I fully understand corporations. My husbnd was CEO of corporation. My son is presently CEO of corporation. I can see a corporate side, but I don't like what I am seeing from Toyota now. Hiring Exponent was the straw that broke the camels back for me.
Toyota does need to go back and redesign. And secretly they probably/may have done already. I do not respect Toyota for using Exponent. Toyota could have used many other great more neutral firms. If they would have done that, then I could see myself taking a different position and not being so critical. I was already aware of Exponent as I am a medical professional. Participated in many meetings with medical experts analyzing medical research.
Are these specs you mentioned in ABC news report?? Must go back and try to find.
So how do Gilbert's test findings stand???
Also like you, when I first heard about the floormat "fix", I thought it seemed like an incorrect diagnosis. I was trying to picture how anyone could shove a floormat in such a way to make the accelerator depress all the way to the floor, and stay there. Pretty tough to do.
When they came back with the "sticky pedal" idea, I thought....well that's entirely possible. But, as they announced that somehow the heavy plastic and metal accelerator assemblies "absorbed moisture" (something that I couldn't fathom) and distorted to the point where they'd stick, I thought...well, that doesn't sound quite correct. Then, they announced a shim to fix it. I began to get more skeptical. And, then they said they would "shave" the accelerator pedals, I thought..."no way". Then, Toyota started finger pointing (specifically at CTS). That's when I began to believe that they were trying to defer blame to someone else, and not indetifying the real cause.
That's when the reports came out about people shifting through all of their gears to get their Toyota/Lexus to stop, but were unsuccessful. And,. then the Smith's incident, in addition to the CHP's family tragic deaths came to light. That's when it became clear to me that this was strictly about Toyota limiting their liability, not finding the correct fix. And, the correct fix was buried somewhere in the electronics and/or software.
The memo from/to Inanba about how much money Toyota saved by "winning millions" by fighting against implementing safety devices and recalls...well that kind of sealed the deal for me.
Btw, (and this is for you too, Sharonkl), I found a newer resume for Dave Gilbert - he got his PhD in 2006, so we can safely call him Dr. Gilbert. link
While I doubt this will happen, if I were Toyota, knowing what a Prof makes (not much, at least not one who's tendered), I'd hire him immediately and pay him a big, fat salary to help them get out of this mess.
Also found that lots of donations from Toyota, including an '09 Matrix and $100,000 in cash in '08 were made to Gilbert's program at the university. (link)
I agree .. while I've never owned a Toyota, my folks have owned three over the years ('73 Corona, '83 Celica and a '91 Camry). Always decent cars, but certainly not perfect either.
I've gotta believe some folks at Harvard Business School are writing up the case study on Toyota .. I'd love to see their take on the whole situation.
P&G is in my home town....probably one of the greatest product development and marketing companies in the world. When the "tainted" Tylenol scare hit, and even though Tylenol was made by Johnson & Johnson, P&G pulled every bottle of anything they sold which could be ingested off the shelves and trashed those products.. They immediately designed what is now "tamper resistant caps" that we're all familiar with today. And, only then did they restock the grocer's shelves (which was a week or two later).
Did they have to do that? No, at least not at the time. Were they affected? No, they didn't make Tylenol. But, they did it. It cost millions to do (probably billions in today's money)..
There's a big difference between cars and pills. The lesson is, identify every potential cause early. Do not sell anything that can be considered faulty with regards to safety. Remedy it quickly. Then, and only then, move on.
Even though I think it's too late for Toyota to take the same approach (obviously), they'd do well to heed those lessons.
Right now, every bit of quality and safety marketing they've ever done, decades of work, have been shot all to hell. It's going to be tougher to regain it, than it was to build it to begin with.
In the words of a former VP candidate, "you betcha!"
Mostly retired but still responsible for the "trim tab factor" at the company the DW and I founded back in '72. That adds up to almost 40 years in the real time, process control, computer applications market.
IMMHO Gilbert over-stepped by shorting the gas pedal sensors to a ~5 volt source in order to show an instance of UA, just to get attention to his more valid findings. The REAL point he should have been making was that the Denso's overall system health monitoring firmware sub-routines did not discover that the two gas pedal sensors output signal was the same. The monitoring software should have almost INSTANTLY detected the short and just as instantly put the entire system into "limp home" mode.
The voltage specification, 0.02 volts, came from two factory shop/repair manuals, an early RX330 and a 2010 RX350. Even with the two signals shorted together it would not be unusual for the short to have just enough resistance to allow for more than a 0.02 volt difference. And here, with Gilbert, we have an INTENTIONAL direct short that apparently has enough resistance to allow the two signals to still be that much different.
Or the firmware system health monitoring system was completely "out to lunch".
In my opinion once DBW was adopted the very next step should have been to disable the throttle opening servomotor the INSTANT and substantive level of brake pressure was sensed/detected. But then we should keep in mind that Toyota/etc was forced to adopt DBW under duress/distress.
They needed to find a way, QUICKLY find a way, to cover-up the design flaw that was inadvertently incorporated in the RX300's U140E/F transaxle now that it was to be adopted fleetwide. The new design was much more fuel efficient vs the A140 design.
Do you think Southern Illinois University Auto Technology Department being ranked #1 in nation will have meaning??? It appears auto electronics is one of Dave Gilberts specialties. What influence will his report have??? He did state what he did most definitely falls under research guidelines for studies.
In testimony Dave Gilbert did state he had started project all on his owned as he had just bought a Toyota truck. News media hype seemed to entice his interest in pursuing it seems. Then once he discovered something, he said he did make calls to Toyota, NHTSA, and then Sean Kane at Safety, Research & Strategies. Kane was back to him immediately. The other two were not. And thus Kane paid him $1800 plus $150 per hour, plus supplied $4000 in needed equipment to proceed ahead. This is just peanuts! Compare to what Toyota pays Exponent - over $1,000,000+++. Since Gilbert really has no real huge financial gains or biases I can find - just don't put him in same category as Exponent. As you have probably already seen I do not like Exponent because of their work& what they with PGE chromium pollution here. Saying chromium doesn't cause cancer?? Facts do speak volumns.
I saw Omar Trinidad had worked with Gilbert on this study conducted at University. See Omar's education background not yet posted.
So what is your prediction about what will come of Gilbert's finding that were presented as only a good starting point for Toyota????
Have you seen the close up pictures of the CHP officers brake rotor and pads..??
The problem isn't really with the brakes, the simple fact is that an engine operating WOT at a decent highway speed can too easily overcome the brakes. More especially so, it seems to me, if the engine is driving the front, PRIMARY braking, wheels. And I am still of the suspecion that with so much torque applied to the gear teeth of the transaxle's drum clutches the clutch disks do not easily separate even when the hydraulic pressure is removed.
It may not be too long before new cars come equipped with a wireless connection. Tuesday night software updates.
For severe problems discovered, the dealers could send out a signal that kills all stopped cars until the new code can be installed and the car rebooted.
Re Dr. Gilbert, the industry must be a bit concerned. They are trying to taint him for accepting the $1800 "witness" fee he was paid by Kane and the lawyers.
And no doubt Toyota/etc, in turn, sent the "call" into the "black hole" called Denso.
NHTSA sent the "call" to Toyota/etc.........DITTO...!!
While Dr. Gilbert's findings are important, they are FAR from "on-point" insofar as UA is concerned. Other than indicating the horrible sloppiness of Denso's firmware code specification and composition, that is.
Steve...I agree. That's really "mouse nuts". And, by them trying to taint Dr Gilbert's testimony tells me they don't want to go down that rabbit hole. That also tells me Toyota is afraid of what they might find, or worse, already know but don't want anyone else to know.
What they should be doing is hiring him to help them find out the real culprit (If they don't already know) and help them to respond with a plan of action to alleviate it.
I still believe Toyota already knows the answer, however. They just don't like it.
You do the wireless download "thing" in cars, you'll get the privacy advocates stating that they don't want that because it gives the manufacturer a way to reach them that they just don't want.
Then, what happens if the connection is somehow interfered with and can't finish. Is the car unusable at that point? I know I can brick my iphone by doing that (don't ask me how I know).
Now since we know University of Southern Illinois Auto Technology Department is ranked #1 in nation and one of Dave Gilbert's specialties appear to be auto electronics - wouldn't he be aware??? Dave Gilbert does have a masters degree. Steve, our nice host sent me info. Gilbert had stated what he did still fell within correct parameters of conducting test studies??
Do you have a link where Gilbert says he did use 0.02 voltage?? From what you said does appear he actually did. Right from the manuel.
I know during testimony and what he reported to ABC News he felt this, if it did exist, was just a starting point for Toyota.. I forget what/ where he felt he saw some problems. But vaguely recall something about failsafe system too. Know he did say Toyota system was the easiest system to get into. Seems to be same possibility you indicated.
Wow - sounds like his study should have been conducted to point more at the failsafe systems issues with recognizing all glitches small-large. I have not seen his actual written study finding. I am use to analyzing medical research studies, so would have been interesting to analyze.
Seems like you and my son totally agree with a need for brake override type system w DBW. When I first spoke with him - first thing he asked. Wanted me to check. I had no idea, and off I went. No brake override. My son had said Toyota is almost 10 years behind the time with brake override. He does development/engineering for Porsche/Audi/BMW/Bentley/VW/etc. And now know most of these do have.
Now my impressions - Toyota is probably/may be aware of these issues. Fact - They announced brake override Nov 25, 2009. This was before second recall. So then any glitches in electronics causing UA/SUA brakes would win out.
Is this correct assumption?? I had understood it was. Just checking for sure.
-Rocky
What does Exponent gain by working for Toyota - $1,000,000+++++
What does Toyota gain by using Exponent??? H-mmm (1)no electronics problem (2)defense reports for all their law suits, witnesses from Exponent (3)hundreds of million dollars savings in defeating their law suits (4)etc..
So I ask who is biased???????????? Who gains most!!!!
That congressman who attacked Kane for paying Gilbert - attempting to discredit Gilbert's findings as biased - is politics talking loud and clear it appears!! Sounds more like he got some money for his own personal politics. Don't forget Toyota had extra lobbyist in
Washington this week. Toyota pays out way over $1,000.000 lobbying in Washington for their interests.
No one has to be rocket scientist to realize what is happening! Facts reveal Gilbert is the least biased.
Toyota hiring Exponent was the final straw. I already knew who Exponent was and what they can do.
Inanba and that memo response - I don't remember it - was telling. Sorry - I strongly feel response was not true. And assume legal issue.
DO YOU KNOW THE FOUR CAUSES OF UA/SUA TOYODA SAID YESTERDAY. I MISSED #1
Here they are
(1)??? Think may be driver
(2)Miscare of car
(3)Structure of vehicle
(4)Structural parts
I am going to post these causes as separate posting also. Think everyone may respond more.
FOUR CAUSES OF UA/SUA SAID YESTERDAY. I MISSED #1
(any of you remember #1 for sure?? - I misssed per my notes)
(1)??? Think may be driver
(2)Care of car
(3)Structure of vehicle
(4)Structural parts
Well, you can turn that off in Windows so the updates aren't automatic. But yeah, the NSA would probably enjoy having a backdoor into it.
And some members here think that Toyota and others are already flashing the cars with new code without telling the owners. But if that were true, some tech somewhere would be spilling the beans.
Dr. Gilbert got his PhD in 2006.
Seems like I have more pieces of the puzzle going in place.
Many thanks. Helped alot!!!
Too bad they never asked such a question.