From: C. E. White on
'Recall is not a 4-letter word,' Toyota exec says
Lindsay Chappell
Automotive News -- August 5, 2010 - 2:39 pm ET

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. -- Toyota Motor Corp. has completed recalls of 80
percent of the vehicles affected by the "sticky pedal" safety problem that
stung the automaker this year, Steve St. Angelo, Toyota's chief quality
officer in the United States, said today at the CAR Management Briefing
Seminars here.

Toyota is now attempting to encourage owners to bring in the remaining 20
percent of affected vehicles. But St. Angelo, who is also a senior North
American manufacturing executive, says that the percentage of recalled
vehicles that have been serviced is already higher than recalls normally
achieve.

Toyota recalled 2.3 million vehicles in the United States over safety
concerns arising from accelerator pedals that could have a tendency to stick
in a depressed state.

All told, Toyota has recalled 11.2 million vehicles globally -- including
9.2 million in the United States -- for sticky pedals and other defects
since last fall.

St. Angelo said there were positive results of the massive recall, despite
the public drubbing Toyota has taken this year among consumers.

The automaker in April agreed to pay a record $16.4 million U.S. fine over
delayed defect notifications related to the sticky pedal problems.

Quality efforts

St. Angelo said Toyota factory workers around North America have stepped up
their suggestions for quality improvements. Engineers are spending more time
talking to owners in the field, and more consumer suggestions are being
incorporated into new-vehicle development programs.

"Recall is not a four-letter word," St. Angelo said in remarks to an
industry audience.

He said Toyota engineers so far have investigated 4,000 vehicles at U.S.
dealerships to probe a recurring allegation that the incidents of sudden
acceleration may instead be the result of a malfunctioning electric throttle
system. Toyota has denied the allegation.

"I'm 100 percent confident that there is nothing wrong with our electric
throttle system," St. Angelo said.

No evidence

He also said that as dealer technicians were making the recall repairs for
sticky pedals they were finding no evidence of any pedals sticking.

"We can't find a problem," he told reporters after his presentation.

St. Angelo said the close scrutiny over Toyota's electric throttle system by
engineers would probably end up nonetheless spurring Toyota to make
improvements in the system for future vehicles.


You can reach Lindsay Chappell at lchappell(a)crain.com.

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