Post by TeggerPost by johnThe floor mats and sticking pedal accounts for only 30% of the
problems. The true cause of sudden acceleration is still not known so
no real solution is possible. IMO it's the electronics.
Or it's simple pedal misapplication, which is the most common cause of SUA
by far, and is essentially out of /any/ automaker's control.
Post by johnPost by john"In earlier testimony, David Gilbert, a Southern Illinois University
professor, tells the panel he was able to produce in a lab environment
a sudden-acceleration incident using a Toyota vehicle, in essence by
introducing a short between two circuits.
Gilbert, whose research was sponsored by consumer advocacy firm Safety
Research & Strategies, says it was fairly simple to confuse the Toyota
electronics, but he has so far been unable to introduce a similar
failure in the electronic controls for a Buick Lucerne."
The lab that Toyota retained managed to reproduce Gilbert's result, but
said that they found it extremely unlikely that such an event could
actually occur in the real world.
I've been following this pretty closely. since I'm retired (-:
Watched hours of hearings, read many articles, etc.
A few points.
Exponent, the lab Toyota hired, is suspect, because their client is
Toyota. Just works that way. You need an independent lab.
Gilbert's findings, though he is sincere, are suspect, because they
haven't been tied to the real world.
The problem is - nobody has really defined a widespread problem.
Sure, the mats - that's been taken care.
The sticky pedals - that's been taken care of.
The need for brake over ride circuitry - that will happen.
The Lexus engine shutdown issue - don't know what's in the works, but
I expect that delayed button will be replaced with a positive instant
means to shot down - could still be a button.
What's left - from what I've seen - is a couple believable cases of
"unintended acceleration"
Where the engine revs on it's own to the limiter.
That weird stuff happened to the Smith woman who testified, and
it happened to a guy who testified on the second day.
These were clear cases of electronic wildly controlling the engine
with no human input.
Nobody has figured those out. Might have nothing to do with pedal
circuitry.
I've mentioned before I experienced this in '85 TBI 2.0 Cavalier.
Didn't go wide open, but would push the car to 50mph with no pedal
input. Brakes easily handled it.
Turned out it was the ECU, which failed entirely a maybe a week after
the problem started.
Most likely an attached scanner could have quickly found the issue,
because though it was intermittent, you didn't have to wait long for
it to happen, and it could be reproduced just by driving for about 5
miles.
But it is possible that a confluence of conditions messing with modern
design electronic signals, combined with hardware anomalies/tolerances
can make this kind of thing happen again, and it will be hell to
reproduce it.
That's why brake overrides and a simple means to shut down are
necessities.
My bottom line on this is the big problems are Toyota not jumping hard
on the mat and pedal problems, the Toyota memo about saving $100
million by forestalling recalls, the oily relationship between mfgs
and NHTSA because of revolving doors, and - the biggest of all - the
cell phone call from the car of the highway patrolman as he and his
family went to flaming death.
That cell phone call is what has really screwed Toyota.
But hell, the car was a loner from a Toyota dealership, the previous
driver had the same issue, and I think the mat issue was supposed to
be taken care of. So they bought that one with eyes wide open.
With millions of cars on the road this "unintended acceleration" won't
go away. Glitches are going to happen. But it can be contained.
Aside from that lame delayed Lexus shutdown, I certainly don't think
Toyotas are more dangerous than other cars,
But I'm not the general public or Congress.
--Vic