Archive for the 'NHTSA' Category

Judge Finds Ford Fraudulently Concealed Electronic Causes of Unintended Acceleration

Monday, July 25th, 2011

The Senior Judge of the Florida’s Fifth Judicial Circuit has set aside a jury verdict in favor of Ford Motor Company, blasting the automaker for defrauding the court and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration by claiming that it knew of no other cause of unintended acceleration than driver error and for concealing years of [...]

How NHTSA and NASA Gamed the Toyota Data

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

Alice and Randy Whitfield of Quality Control Systems Corp. have released a new analysis for Safety Research & Strategies that examines the statistical underpinnings of the NHTSA and NASA reports on Toyota Unintended Acceleration which shows that the agencies based their conclusions about the possibility of an electronic cause on a series of unsupportable suppositions, [...]

Time to Examine Rear-Facing Infant Seat Safety Improvements?

Monday, June 20th, 2011

That an infant seat should be placed in the rear-seat of the car, facing rearwards is an article of faith, preached by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the American Academy of Pediatricians. Manufacturers only make rear-facing infant seats. On its website, NHTSA advises: “A rear-facing car seat is the best seat for your [...]

Taking the Burn Out of Seat Heaters

Thursday, June 9th, 2011

Back in February, SRS wrote to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers and National Mobility Equipment Dealers about the problem of car seat heaters and drivers with lower body sensory deficits, such as paraplegics and diabetics (See It’s Time to Make Seat Heaters Safer). Many consumer heating devices that make [...]

Hindsight’s Still 20-20: The Toyota Quality Report

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

We here at the Safety Record Blog are getting caught up on our blogging after a hectic  before-the-holiday-weekend week attending Edmund.com’s Let’s Blame it on the Drivers conference and releasing our response to the NHTSA and NESC report on Toyota. If you haven’t had a chance to read this special edition of The Safety Record, [...]

Keeping Automakers’ Sales Truly Safe: The Edmund’s Conference

Thursday, May 26th, 2011

SRS was in attendance, Tuesday, as the cyber sales team at Edmund’s ushered in a “new chapter in the conversation between government, the auto industry, safety advocates, academics and consumers, marked by thoughtful, data-driven contributions from all.” It was written amid cocktails and at more sobering and highly-scripted venues inside the Newseum, the 250,000 square-foot [...]

NHTSA-NASA Reports Show That Toyota Electronics are Deficient – Can Lead to Unintended Acceleration: Toyota’s Involvement Exposed in New Documents

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

REHOBOTH, MASS – The Safety Record, Safety Research & Strategies’ watchdog publication, published its new findings on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and the NASA Engineering and Safety Center (NESC) reports on Toyota Unintended Acceleration.  Following extensive review of those reports and previously unavailable documents recently released by NHTSA and interviews with numerous [...]

Updated Toyota Report: The Recall Ate My Floormat!

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 [...]

IIHS Asks NHTSA for Stronger Underride Rule

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

This month, the Insurance Institute on Highway Safety reignited efforts to address the underride problem and petitioned the federal government to “require stronger underride guards that will remain in place during a crash and to mandate guards for more large trucks and trailers.” The Institute based its latest effort on a study using the Large [...]

Fuel Spit-back Continues to Plague Chrysler Vehicles, Owners on the Hook

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

Fuel “spit-back” through the filler neck has been a longstanding problem in several Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep models, caused by the Inlet Check Valve (ICV) mounted in the fuel tank. Despite some limited recalls and at least one extended lifetime warranty, this defect, which first surfaced in 2001, continues to plague a number of models. [...]