Archive for the 'Accelerator pedal' Category
Thursday, January 26th, 2012
When you’ve shelled out big bucks for a message, the dissenters have to be squashed – and fast. Yesterday, Toyota public relations rapid response team tried to bring the Toyota Unintended Acceleration (UA) problem back into its multi-million-dollar corral at the There’s Nothing to See Here, Folks Ranch. Mike Michels, Vice President for External Communications [...]
Posted in Accelerator pedal, Electronic Throttle, Electronic Throttle Control, Government Accountability, Michael Pecht, NASA, NHTSA, Stuck Throttle, Sudden Unintended Acceleration, Toyota | No Comments »
Wednesday, January 18th, 2012
The National Academies of Science released today its long-awaited review of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s Toyota Unintended Acceleration investigations, its regulatory policies and the agency’s next steps in dealing with electronic defects. The 16-member panel of volunteers, from a multitude of related disciplines, met 15 times over about 18 months, and were, at [...]
Posted in Accelerator pedal, FMVSS 114 Theft Protection, NASA, National Academy of Science, NHTSA, NHTSA, The Silver Book, Tin Whiskers, Toyota, Unintended Acceleration, Unintended Acceleration | No Comments »
Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011
Well, here we are, 14 months after Toyota began admitting to the world that it could no longer design a simple pedal, a floor mat or a floor pan, by launching Phase I of many phases of a recall to replace all-weather floor mats that may entrap the accelerator. Initially, the recall 90L, the mother [...]
Posted in Accelerator pedal, Electronic Throttle, Electronic Throttle Control, Electronics, Floor mat, Floor Mat Interference, NHTSA, Toyota | No Comments »
Tuesday, January 4th, 2011
In 2010, NHTSA levied nearly $50 million in fines against Toyota for flouting the recall regulations in three separate instances. The total represents the largest single fines in the agency’s history – and, (although we haven’t checked) quite possibly more than the agency has ever collected from any and all automakers in 40 years of [...]
Posted in Accelerator pedal, Electronic Throttle, Electronic Throttle Control, Floor Mat Interference, NHTSA, Rulemaking, Stuck Throttle, Sudden Unintended Acceleration, Throttle Contols, Timeliness Query, Toyota | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 4th, 2010
The splash that retired NHTSA recall division chief George Person made when he told The Wall Street Journal that the agency was sitting on a report that would show driver error to be the cause of Toyota SUA events has been submerged by a new wave of reality, as attorneys heading the Multi-District Litigation (MDL) [...]
Posted in Accelerator pedal, Black Box, EDR, Electronic Throttle, Electronic Throttle Control, Electronics, George Person, NHTSA, Toyota | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 14th, 2010
The Wall Street Journal made a splash yesterday when it reported that the US DOT had analyzed dozens of data recorders from Toyota vehicles in crashes blamed on unintended acceleration and found that the throttles were open and brakes were not applied. These findings support Toyota’s position that SUA events are not caused by vehicle [...]
Posted in Accelerator pedal, advocacy, Black Box, Dr. David Gilbert, Electronic Throttle, Electronic Throttle Control, Event Data Recorder, National Academy of Science, NHTSA, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Stuck Throttle, Sudden Unintended Acceleration, Throttle Body, Throttle Contols, Todd Hubing, Toyota | 1 Comment »
Monday, June 21st, 2010
Once upon a time, there was a Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard for accelerator controls. It was a very ancient standard, written in 1972, when vehicles were equipped with purely mechanical systems. FMVSS 124 Accelerator Control Systems specified the requirements for the return of a vehicle’s throttle to the idle position when the driver removed [...]
Posted in Accelerator pedal, Congressional Hearings, Electronic Throttle, Electronic Throttle Control, Electronics, Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 2010, Rulemaking, Stuck Throttle, Throttle Contols, Toyota | No Comments »
Friday, June 4th, 2010
Congress has never been one to let a motor vehicle crisis go to waste, and the Toyota Sudden Unintended Acceleration debacle has been no exception. Hearings before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce has revealed some distressing regulatory gaps – such as a federal motor vehicle safety standard for accelerator controls that was established [...]
Posted in Accelerator pedal, advocacy, Congress, Henry Waxman, NHTSA, Sudden Unintended Acceleration | No Comments »
Friday, May 21st, 2010
Yesterday, the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Oversight and Investigations Sub-committee rendered its verdict after conducting interviews with key personnel from Toyota and Exponent and reviewing some 100,000 Toyota- and NHTSA-produced documents about the much-heralded “exhaustive” efforts to determine if there was a connection between Sudden Unintended Acceleration and Toyota’s electronic throttle control system: Toyota [...]
Posted in Accelerator pedal, advocacy, Bart Stupak, Benenson Strategy Group, Congress, Congressional Hearings, Electronic Throttle, Henry Waxman, Stuck Throttle, Sudden Unintended Acceleration, Throttle Body, Toyota | No Comments »
Thursday, April 22nd, 2010
When the auto industry needs America’s best scientific minds to validate a foregone conclusion, they turn to Exponent. As we reported during Toyota Tactics Week, David Michaels called out the Menlo Park, California defense-litigation firm in his 2008 book Doubt is Their Product: How Industry’s Assault on Science Threatens Your Health: “Exponent’s scientists are prolific [...]
Posted in Accelerator pedal, advocacy, Congressional Hearings, David Michaels, Electronic Throttle, Electronic Throttle Control, Electronics, Exponent, Stuck Throttle, Sudden Unintended Acceleration, Throttle Body, Toyota | No Comments »