autogyro wrote:Sorry breezy but I think you will find that such fatalities and accidents are not just confined to Toyota vehicles and that many other manufacturers have an equal if not far worse record.
Many accidents relating to mechanical failures could be easily dealt with if people learnt to drive vehicles better and more attention was paid to teaching them how vehicles work and what to do in emergencies. There seems to be a total lack of such skills in most modern drivers. I find the modern attitude to vehicles as much the same as the current PC societies attitude to life in general.
It thinks that everything and everyone else owes it a living without problems and if any occur it cannot be their fault, god forbid.
Hey autogyro, I totally agree with you. However, the throttle problem is not a driver error issue, though it definitely appears that the Prius case from last week was a scam by some lowlife, and an idiot at that. Priuses weren't even involved in that issue.
The throttle issue reared it's head directly when Toyota switched to a fly by wire throttle system. I think that was in 2004. Anymore, that's hardly unique in car design but it was when they developed it. These reports have been coming thru since the year they were introduced. Almost any other mfr has a built in failsafe for fly by wire where if the system gets conflicting inputs it disregards the throttle inputs. Just makes sense from an engineering standpoint. Toyota never thought much about these reports and they solved the safety issue by lobbying congress rather than thinking "hey there might be an issue here, let's put some failsafe into the system like everyone else does".
Of course this issue really came to the fore last fall when a new Lexus SUV ran wide open for miles with an off duty state trooper at the wheel. They called for help on cell phones and the trooper did everything he could but in the end it was a steaming heap in a field where the 4 occupants died. Toyota claimed it was floor mats that did this and set out to changing floor mats because they really couldn't come up with anything else.
Despite the fact that these issues had been getting reported since 2004, Toyota had no clue. No clue because it was easier/cheaper to pay off some lawyers in DC than to even think there could be a real problem here.
So I leave it to you, is it just driver error behind these things???? I certainly don't think so, and it sure ain't floor mats and I highly doubt it's a throttle pedal. There have many more reports in cars that have since been "fixed". Fortunately none of them wound up in a smoldering heap .. yet. But it's likely to occur again. When it does all the PR and lobbyist money in world won't be enough to save the Toyota reputation.