From: Hachiroku ハチロク on
On Mon, 08 Feb 2010 04:26:37 -0800, SMS wrote:

>
> No doubt Toyota decided that the non-Denso part was going to be cheaper,
> and they used it instead of the part used in Japan.

No, it has to do with "US content".
The more US parts, the more they could say was US content.
I think foreign manufacturers get tax breaks if they use US parts, so the
more parts, the more the incentive. I'm not sure about that, but I believe
it works that way.

They also avoid any tariffs imposed by the amount of Domestic content.

All I can say...glad I bought a Scion. They're ALL made in Japan...


From: Ashton Crusher on
On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 18:26:18 -0500, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS>
wrote:

>On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 15:36:56 -0700, Ashton Crusher wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 17:00:00 -0500, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS> wrote:
>>
>>>On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 12:55:59 -0500, Mike Hunter wrote:
>>>
>>>> If you did, than I could not drift away, even if you did not properly
>>>> engage the shifter into the PARK position, as was the actual cause.
>>>
>>>
>>>YABUT!
>>>
>>>How could you even forget about the Ford recall for transmissions? They
>>>talked it to death almost as much as the currect Toyota recall.
>>>
>>>However, 'talked to death' is not a good phrase to use. Hundreds were
>>>killed and thousands injured thanks to Ford NOT fixing the transmissions,
>>>but issuing a sticker for the dash instead.
>>>
>>>You want to make such a big deal about the Toyota recall. So far, I don't
>>>think anyone has died yet from the sticking pedal, and Toyota is fixing
>>>the problem.
>>
>>
>> 2500 accidents, 12 deaths, or something like that.
>
>Kinda pales compared with over 300 deaths and thousands of injuries for a
>transmission Ford didn't want to (and DIDN'T) fix...
>
>

Do you think that makes the 12 dead people feel any better?
From: jim beam on
On 02/08/2010 04:26 AM, SMS wrote:
> Hachiroku ハチロク wrote:
>> On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 09:42:01 -0500, Mike Hunter wrote:
>>
>>> Ford was proven to not be at fault, dummy.
>>
>> TOYOTA has been proven to not be at fault!
>> It was CTS that made the accelerators in China.
>>
>> The recall does NOT apply to accelerators provided by DENSO.
>
> Whether it's the tires Ford used or the accelerator pedals Toyota used
> it's no excuse to blame the supplier.
>
> Ford used the larger P235 tires even though they were more prone to
> rollover in their tests than the P225 tires, and the P235 tires were the
> ones that were recalled. Ford also used lower tire pressure than
> Firestone recommended because they wanted more "grip" and the lower than
> normal pressure increased the heat on the tires which led to the tread
> separation. Ford was as much, or more, to blame as Firestone/Bridgestone.

understate that again please.

fact is, NO vehicle should roll just because of a flat. ever. that
frod managed to bullshit and red-herring about tires being the cause,
and that they persuaded people to believe it, not only beggars belief,
it disgraces the representatives who pressured the nhtsa into inactivity
both before and after this vehicle hit the streets.


>
> No doubt Toyota decided that the non-Denso part was going to be cheaper,
> and they used it instead of the part used in Japan.

they need and want to source parts in the location of assembly, north
america. if their supplier farmed manufacture out to china, well, they
deserve to lose the business. mind you, toyota should have been paying
attention as well.


>
> The difference is in how the companies responded to the recalls. Ford
> blamed Bridgestone. Toyota acknowledged that they were at fault.

frod killed a /lot/ more people too.
From: Hachiroku ハチロク on
On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 21:49:52 -0700, Ashton Crusher wrote:

> On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 18:26:18 -0500, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS> wrote:
>
>>On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 15:36:56 -0700, Ashton Crusher wrote:
>>
>>> On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 17:00:00 -0500, Hachiroku ???? <Trueno(a)e86.GTS>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>>On Sun, 07 Feb 2010 12:55:59 -0500, Mike Hunter wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> If you did, than I could not drift away, even if you did not properly
>>>>> engage the shifter into the PARK position, as was the actual cause.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>YABUT!
>>>>
>>>>How could you even forget about the Ford recall for transmissions? They
>>>>talked it to death almost as much as the currect Toyota recall.
>>>>
>>>>However, 'talked to death' is not a good phrase to use. Hundreds were
>>>>killed and thousands injured thanks to Ford NOT fixing the
>>>>transmissions, but issuing a sticker for the dash instead.
>>>>
>>>>You want to make such a big deal about the Toyota recall. So far, I
>>>>don't think anyone has died yet from the sticking pedal, and Toyota is
>>>>fixing the problem.
>>>
>>>
>>> 2500 accidents, 12 deaths, or something like that.
>>
>>Kinda pales compared with over 300 deaths and thousands of injuries for a
>>transmission Ford didn't want to (and DIDN'T) fix...
>>
>>
>>
> Do you think that makes the 12 dead people feel any better?

Not at all. But Toyota is fixing the problem. Wonder if they could have
gotten away with printing 2.3 million stickers...



From: C. E. White on

"SMS" <scharf.steven(a)geemail.com> wrote in message
news:4b6d0234$0$1621$742ec2ed(a)news.sonic.net...
> john wrote:
>> "Remarkable doesn't begin to describe what's happening to Toyota
>> Motor
>> Corp.
>>
>> Its reputation for delivering safe, reliable, quality-engineered
>> vehicles is in tatters.
>
> Actually it isn't. I was listening to an interview today on NPR with
> an automotive safety expert. The Toyota recall for accelerator
> pedals is only the 5th largest recall, and unlike bigger recalls for
> other manufacturers (Ford and GM) it's going to be solved much more
> quickly. Ford has the honor of the biggest recall in history.

Are you sure? Are you counting the floor mat, pedal reshaping, and
pedal control shim as three separate recalls or one?

Ford "largest recall in history" is for the stupid cruise control
brake switch - which Ford started using becasue of sudden acceleration
accusations. I think you probably could break it down into at least
four different recalls depending ont he vehicle line since the
implementation varied from line to line (some had constant power to
the switch, some didn't, some came from the factory with a fuse, some
didn't etc.). In the end Ford just recalled them all to make sure no
one could complain they were left out (even though there is little
evidence there was a problem outside of the initial relatively small
batch of bad switches Ford and NHTSA identified 3 or 4 years ago).
What Ford did would be the same as Toyota recalling everything they
have sold in the US for fifteen years and replacing all the
acceleartor pedals, even thought we all know only a few are actually a
problem. I think Ford just wanted to make sure the cruise control
switch was permanently out of the press. Probably a good move. If
Toyota had handled the problem with the accelrator pedals this way in
2007, they probably wouldn't be in the press today. Sometimes you just
have to bite the bullet and admit you screwed up.

Ed