Discussion:
Toyota's massive recall woes halt production, ding top quality rep
(too old to reply)
john
2010-01-27 03:31:35 UTC
Permalink
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."

From The Detroit News: http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Hachiroku ハチロク
2010-01-26 23:00:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.

Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
jr92
2010-01-27 05:07:03 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=3...
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Kinda took a while for them to realize an "error", didn't it???

How many recalls over the past ten years???

20 MILLION?????

Maybe even MORE???


Naw, this is simply more than Toyota "doing what is right".


They denied, and fought the sticking accelerator issue, just like they
fought the sludge in their engines.


They have MAJOR quality control issues at this point.


And MANY of them, I might add.




What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.


Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.


Time will tell if their PR move pays off.


Myself,

I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into
the likes of a Toyota.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Hachiroku ハチロク
2010-01-27 00:37:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?

My last Toyota was recalled for...

the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.

With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...

Chevy making rolling blunders

I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
jr92
2010-01-27 06:30:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
Good old GM cars.



Perform better in crash tests than their Japanese counterparts.




Are more fuel effecient than their Japanese counterparts.




Have much better performance than their Japanese counterparts.




Are not recalled nearly as often as their Japanese counterparts.




Engines dont sludge, suspensions dont rust, and throttles dont stick
wide open nearly as often as their Japanese counterparts.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
And my last Pontiac was recalled for an external thermometer guage not
reading accuractly.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Of course, certain Toyotas could have used a sticker warning drivers
that the throttle could stick wide open at any time.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Chevy making rolling blunders
And certain Toyotas rolling over, period.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
Prices on many models are certain to go up, due to shortages, because,
at least for the time being, they arent being made anymore. (I guess
there goes your "good price")


There is a rumor going about that the vechicles throttles may stick
open. making them too dangerous to drive.


I guess that proves they "aren/t perfect."







In my books, that is FAR from being perfect.
ransley
2010-01-27 12:24:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by jr92
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
Good old GM cars.
Perform better in crash tests than their Japanese counterparts.
Are more fuel effecient than their Japanese counterparts.
Have much better performance than their Japanese counterparts.
Are not recalled nearly as often as their Japanese counterparts.
Engines dont sludge, suspensions dont rust, and throttles dont stick
wide open nearly as often as their Japanese counterparts.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
And my last Pontiac was recalled for an external thermometer guage not
reading accuractly.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Of course, certain Toyotas could have used a sticker warning drivers
that the throttle could stick wide open at any time.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Chevy making rolling blunders
And certain Toyotas rolling over, period.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
Prices on many models are certain to go up, due to shortages, because,
at least for the time being, they arent being made anymore. (I guess
there goes your "good price")
There is a rumor going about that the vechicles throttles may stick
open. making them too dangerous to drive.
I guess that proves they "aren/t perfect."
In my books, that is FAR from being perfect.
PONTIAC, you compare Toy to PONTIAC
HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHAAAAAAAA, you gota stop lyin
to yourself !! When I look at Consumer Reports ratings all the Black
marks on pontiac make me wonder how they survived this long. I went to
a dealer to look at one and drove it, the front windshield had 4 air
bubbles in it, it was a cheap black plastic interior, it reminded me
of that cheap 70s look on how they always looked dirty inside. I asked
if I could get brown, yea he said, but the dash would have been that
cheap black crappy looking shit, it dove hard, steered stiff and I
said to the salesman, " any company willing to pass this defective
piece of crap windshield with 4 air bubbles in it wont get my vote for
confidence that any bearings or anything elseis not defective or crap.
PONTIAC is the cheapest crap made besides Yugo. And you bs on milage
and all else is nothing but lies, and I am not driving a toyota right
now, but I still have one thats fine, a 91.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-27 17:17:11 UTC
Permalink
Perhaps but one has to ask, if you could afford a new car today would you
buy the one with a bubble in the glass or the one that can go out of control
and kill your wife and children? ;)
Post by ransley
Post by jr92
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
Good old GM cars.
Perform better in crash tests than their Japanese counterparts.
Are more fuel effecient than their Japanese counterparts.
Have much better performance than their Japanese counterparts.
Are not recalled nearly as often as their Japanese counterparts.
Engines dont sludge, suspensions dont rust, and throttles dont stick
wide open nearly as often as their Japanese counterparts.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
And my last Pontiac was recalled for an external thermometer guage not
reading accuractly.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Of course, certain Toyotas could have used a sticker warning drivers
that the throttle could stick wide open at any time.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Chevy making rolling blunders
And certain Toyotas rolling over, period.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
Prices on many models are certain to go up, due to shortages, because,
at least for the time being, they arent being made anymore. (I guess
there goes your "good price")
There is a rumor going about that the vechicles throttles may stick
open. making them too dangerous to drive.
I guess that proves they "aren/t perfect."
In my books, that is FAR from being perfect.
PONTIAC, you compare Toy to PONTIAC
HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHAAAAAAAA, you gota stop lyin
to yourself !! When I look at Consumer Reports ratings all the Black
marks on pontiac make me wonder how they survived this long. I went to
a dealer to look at one and drove it, the front windshield had 4 air
bubbles in it, it was a cheap black plastic interior, it reminded me
of that cheap 70s look on how they always looked dirty inside. I asked
if I could get brown, yea he said, but the dash would have been that
cheap black crappy looking shit, it dove hard, steered stiff and I
said to the salesman, " any company willing to pass this defective
piece of crap windshield with 4 air bubbles in it wont get my vote for
confidence that any bearings or anything elseis not defective or crap.
PONTIAC is the cheapest crap made besides Yugo. And you bs on milage
and all else is nothing but lies, and I am not driving a toyota right
now, but I still have one thats fine, a 91.
jr92
2010-01-29 04:33:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by ransley
Post by jr92
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
Good old GM cars.
Perform better in crash tests than their Japanese counterparts.
Are more fuel effecient than their Japanese counterparts.
Have much better performance than their Japanese counterparts.
Are not recalled nearly as often as their Japanese counterparts.
Engines dont sludge, suspensions dont rust, and throttles dont stick
wide open nearly as often as their Japanese counterparts.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
And my last Pontiac was recalled for an external thermometer guage not
reading accuractly.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Of course, certain Toyotas could have used a sticker warning drivers
that the throttle could stick wide open at any time.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Chevy making rolling blunders
And certain Toyotas rolling over, period.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
Prices on many models are certain to go up, due to shortages, because,
at least for the time being, they arent being made anymore. (I guess
there goes your "good price")
There is a rumor going about that the vechicles throttles may stick
open. making them too dangerous to drive.
I guess that proves they "aren/t perfect."
In my books, that is FAR from being perfect.
PONTIAC, you compare Toy to PONTIAC
HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHAAAAAAAA, you gota stop lyin
to yourself !! When I look at Consumer Reports ratings all the Black
marks on pontiac make me wonder how they survived this long. I went to
a dealer to look at one and drove it, the front windshield had 4 air
bubbles in it, it was a cheap black plastic interior, it reminded me
of that cheap 70s look on how they always looked dirty inside. I asked
if I could get brown, yea he said, but the dash would have been that
cheap black crappy looking shit, it dove hard, steered stiff and I
said to the salesman, " any company willing to pass this defective
piece of crap windshield with 4 air bubbles in it wont get my vote for
confidence that any bearings or anything elseis not defective or crap.
PONTIAC is the cheapest crap made besides Yugo. And you bs on milage
and all else is nothing but lies, and I am not driving a toyota right
now, but I still have one thats fine, a 91.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I own four Pontiacs as a matter of fact.

Purchased a new g8 a couple of years ago.

Monster car. Toyota could only dream of making something like this.

Also own an 06 Grand Prix, bought new four years ago. 50000 miles,
never been in the shop.

V-6 has 200 hp and delivers 31 mph highway, the same as the four
banger Camry got in the same model year. Don't take my word, research
the facts that the likes of CR fails to mention, they only tell you
objective stuff.

And the throttle never has stuck open on these cars, as far as I know.


Own a 98 Grand Prix GTP, been a daily driver for 12 years. Dependable
as they come. Pretty fast car, but can get you 30 mpg highway if you
drive it right.

Toyota didn;t make any Camrys like that back then.

I also own a low mileage 98 TA, but no sense even trying to compare
that to anything Toyota has made. Suffice it to say it is pretty
wicked, and I haven't had any trouble out it, either.


So, yeah, I DO compare Pontiacs (actually General Motors, but in this
case, I'll stick to Pontiacs) with "Toy" I have something to go by.
Ownership for many years.


While it looks like the only thing you have to go by is what Consumer
Reports told you, and what one LOOKED like to you.
Hachiroku ハチロク
2010-01-27 18:03:01 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you
can get at a good price.
Prices on many models are certain to go up, due to shortages, because, at
least for the time being, they arent being made anymore. (I guess there
goes your "good price")
There is a rumor going about that the vechicles throttles may stick open.
making them too dangerous to drive.
I guess that proves they "aren/t perfect."
In my books, that is FAR from being perfect.
<YAWN> They're big. They're playing in a world game.
They have made far fewer errors than GM. They have made far fewer erros
than Ford.

Rather than Ban-Aiding the problem, I'm willing to bet when the models
come back on the market they'll be much better than when they went off.
Toyota fired their President last year because of quality issues, and a
family member took over.

With the Japanese, and especially with a family member in charge, it is a
lot more than making a good car, or making a good profit. The Japanese
still believe in "saving face" and don't listen to the shareholders.

I think when Toyota emerges from this they will have a far better product
than they have ever had, and that's saying something.

GM would sweep it under the rug, whistling and looking the other way while
doing so. Totally different Corporate Culture between the two. This is a
BIG disgrace for Toyota, and for the Toyoda family members (not a
misspelling; look it up) and they will redouble in order to make up for it.
What would GM do?
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-28 01:47:20 UTC
Permalink
On Tue, 26 Jan 2010 22:30:51 -0800 (PST), jr92
Post by jr92
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
Good old GM cars.
Perform better in crash tests than their Japanese counterparts.
Are more fuel effecient than their Japanese counterparts.
Have much better performance than their Japanese counterparts.
Are not recalled nearly as often as their Japanese counterparts.
Engines dont sludge, suspensions dont rust, and throttles dont stick
wide open nearly as often as their Japanese counterparts.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
And my last Pontiac was recalled for an external thermometer guage not
reading accuractly.
And GM built the 3.8 with defective intake manifolds/gaskets for HOW
many decades, without a fix??
Post by jr92
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Of course, certain Toyotas could have used a sticker warning drivers
that the throttle could stick wide open at any time.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Chevy making rolling blunders
And certain Toyotas rolling over, period.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
Prices on many models are certain to go up, due to shortages, because,
at least for the time being, they arent being made anymore. (I guess
there goes your "good price")
There is a rumor going about that the vechicles throttles may stick
open. making them too dangerous to drive.
I guess that proves they "aren/t perfect."
In my books, that is FAR from being perfect.
Vic Smith
2010-01-28 01:59:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
And GM built the 3.8 with defective intake manifolds/gaskets for HOW
many decades, without a fix??
Thought that was just the Series II. 1994 to maybe 2002 before they
used an improved gasket. 8 years maybe.
Terrible response, but hardly "decades."

--Vic
hls
2010-01-28 18:04:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Vic Smith
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
And GM built the 3.8 with defective intake manifolds/gaskets for HOW
many decades, without a fix??
Thought that was just the Series II. 1994 to maybe 2002 before they
used an improved gasket. 8 years maybe.
Terrible response, but hardly "decades."
--Vic
Right..almost a decade but not quite.. Longer by far than it should have
taken to take care of an obvious cockup.
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-28 19:00:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by hls
Post by Vic Smith
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
And GM built the 3.8 with defective intake manifolds/gaskets for HOW
many decades, without a fix??
Thought that was just the Series II. 1994 to maybe 2002 before they
used an improved gasket. 8 years maybe.
Terrible response, but hardly "decades."
--Vic
Right..almost a decade but not quite.. Longer by far than it should have
taken to take care of an obvious cockup.
No, the "series 2" was actually a slight improvement overall, but they
ended up with an EGR heat problem. 1995 wasn't series 2 yet.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 20:43:53 UTC
Permalink
You better research "Asbestos and the US government," it you think gasket
problems were a result of anything ANY of the auto manufactures did. LOL
Post by hls
Post by Vic Smith
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
And GM built the 3.8 with defective intake manifolds/gaskets for HOW
many decades, without a fix??
Thought that was just the Series II. 1994 to maybe 2002 before they
used an improved gasket. 8 years maybe.
Terrible response, but hardly "decades."
--Vic
Right..almost a decade but not quite.. Longer by far than it should have
taken to take care of an obvious cockup.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-27 17:13:25 UTC
Permalink
Old news, one can no longer buys those old cars, You can however still buy
one of the many runaway Toyotas models.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Chevy making rolling blunders
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
E. Meyer
2010-01-27 17:27:56 UTC
Permalink
Not since yesterday. You can't buy "one of the many runaway Toyotas models"
anymore. Catch up Mike, you missed the big announcement.


On 1/27/10 11:13 AM, in article
Post by Mike Hunter
Old news, one can no longer buys those old cars, You can however still buy
one of the many runaway Toyotas models.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Chevy making rolling blunders
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-27 21:26:22 UTC
Permalink
Perhaps in time, but you will never be able to buy those old cars. ;)
Post by E. Meyer
Not since yesterday. You can't buy "one of the many runaway Toyotas models"
anymore. Catch up Mike, you missed the big announcement.
On 1/27/10 11:13 AM, in article
Post by Mike Hunter
Old news, one can no longer buys those old cars, You can however still buy
one of the many runaway Toyotas models.
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Chevy making rolling blunders
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
dr_jeff
2010-01-27 22:59:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
Old news, one can no longer buys those old cars, You can however still buy
one of the many runaway Toyotas models.
only used
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Chevy making rolling blunders
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 00:28:31 UTC
Permalink
You are correct, I keep forgetting most of the buyers in this NG are used
car buyers.
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Old news, one can no longer buys those old cars, You can however still
buy one of the many runaway Toyotas models.
only used
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Chevy making rolling blunders
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
dr_jeff
2010-01-28 00:44:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
You are correct, I keep forgetting most of the buyers in this NG are used
car buyers.
Something wrong with buying used cars?
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Old news, one can no longer buys those old cars, You can however still
buy one of the many runaway Toyotas models.
only used
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Chevy making rolling blunders
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 01:30:09 UTC
Permalink
No, not if that's all one can afford, but why would anyone want something
that the previous owner(s) no longer wanted, if one could afford a new
vehicle? Do you buy used clothing, appliances and furniture as well?
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
You are correct, I keep forgetting most of the buyers in this NG are used
car buyers.
Something wrong with buying used cars?
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Old news, one can no longer buys those old cars, You can however still
buy one of the many runaway Toyotas models.
only used
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Chevy making rolling blunders
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
dr_jeff
2010-01-28 01:36:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
No, not if that's all one can afford, but why would anyone want something
that the previous owner(s) no longer wanted, if one could afford a new
vehicle?
Why did the previous owner not want something anymore? Couldn't make the
payments on the BMW? Too much gas for the big SUV? Needed a bigger car
than the Ford Focus?

There are different reasons why someone would want to get rid of a car
besides quality issues. That's why people often lease a vehicle rather
than buy them, too.

And, often, people realize that by buying a car that is 2 or 3 years
old, one can get a nearly new car for far less than a brand new car. In
the long run, it is often far more economical.
Post by Mike Hunter
Do you buy used clothing, appliances and furniture as well?
What would be wrong with doing that?

Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
You are correct, I keep forgetting most of the buyers in this NG are used
car buyers.
Something wrong with buying used cars?
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Old news, one can no longer buys those old cars, You can however still
buy one of the many runaway Toyotas models.
only used
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Chevy making rolling blunders
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 02:20:15 UTC
Permalink
Nothing, if that is what one has to do, but my question was WHY buy used
when one can afford to buy new?

When one buys a used vehicle one can never know for sure how that vehicles
was used or abused, or if it was properly maintained or not. When does one
generally have the most problems with ANY vehicle, during the first 50,000
or the last?

When one buys used THEY are loosing the beginning mileage, the mileage that
is most likely covered by a warranty. What has one gained, IF one can
afford to buy new rather than used?
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
No, not if that's all one can afford, but why would anyone want something
that the previous owner(s) no longer wanted, if one could afford a new
vehicle?
Why did the previous owner not want something anymore? Couldn't make the
payments on the BMW? Too much gas for the big SUV? Needed a bigger car
than the Ford Focus?
There are different reasons why someone would want to get rid of a car
besides quality issues. That's why people often lease a vehicle rather
than buy them, too.
And, often, people realize that by buying a car that is 2 or 3 years old,
one can get a nearly new car for far less than a brand new car. In the
long run, it is often far more economical.
Post by Mike Hunter
Do you buy used clothing, appliances and furniture as well?
What would be wrong with doing that?
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
You are correct, I keep forgetting most of the buyers in this NG are
used car buyers.
Something wrong with buying used cars?
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Old news, one can no longer buys those old cars, You can however
still buy one of the many runaway Toyotas models.
only used
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by jr92
What they are doing now is is simply a PR move.
Many are considering it to be a desperation tactic.
Time will tell if their PR move pays off.
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into the
likes of a Toyota.
Really? What DO you put them into?
My last Toyota was recalled for...
the antenna not mounted to the body correctly, which may cause static on
the radio.
With Ford sticking stickers on the dash saying, This car may go into
reverse at any time...
Chevy making rolling blunders
I'll stick to Toytota. They aren't perfect, but about as close as you can
get at a good price.
Elmo P. Shagnasty
2010-01-28 10:39:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
Nothing, if that is what one has to do, but my question was WHY buy used
when one can afford to buy new?
When one buys a used vehicle one can never know for sure how that vehicles
was used or abused, or if it was properly maintained or not. When does one
generally have the most problems with ANY vehicle, during the first 50,000
or the last?
When one buys used THEY are loosing the beginning mileage, the mileage that
is most likely covered by a warranty. What has one gained, IF one can
afford to buy new rather than used?
Because one chooses not to spend his money that way. If you choose
well, you don't have to worry about loosing the beginning/warranty
mileage.

But since you're biased against GM, it's no wonder you think the way you
do. If you put a gun to my head and told me I had to drive a GM, I'd
avoid used like the plague, just like you.
Vic Smith
2010-01-28 11:42:31 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 05:39:53 -0500, "Elmo P. Shagnasty"
Post by Elmo P. Shagnasty
Post by Mike Hunter
Nothing, if that is what one has to do, but my question was WHY buy used
when one can afford to buy new?
When one buys a used vehicle one can never know for sure how that vehicles
was used or abused, or if it was properly maintained or not. When does one
generally have the most problems with ANY vehicle, during the first 50,000
or the last?
When one buys used THEY are loosing the beginning mileage, the mileage that
is most likely covered by a warranty. What has one gained, IF one can
afford to buy new rather than used?
Because one chooses not to spend his money that way. If you choose
well, you don't have to worry about loosing the beginning/warranty
mileage.
But since you're biased against GM, it's no wonder you think the way you
do. If you put a gun to my head and told me I had to drive a GM, I'd
avoid used like the plague, just like you.
That goes against your argument about depreciation. Best to get the
car that depreciates most, all else being equal. Unless you're biased
of course. Then you get into a situation that happens with Toyota or
Honda, where you sometimes see 1 or 2 year old used cars selling near
new car prices.
Then Mike is right about buying new.
But his other arguments just show he doesn't know how to select a good
used car. I can easily find a GM car for $2500-4000 that's good for
100k miles. Here it'll rust out before I add that many miles to it
anyway. Might put a few hundred bucks in it up front to fix some
minor items, then maintenance expense is chump change.
Done it more than once. 5-8 years old is the sweet spot.
Had my '90 Corsica since '98 and my '97 Lumina since '02.
Each cost me $2500 from private owners. Put about 50k miles on each.
Doesn't take a mathematician to see how much money I could put in my
bank account. Add a couple other $2500 Corsicas and a $3500 Grand Am
I bought for my kids as their first cars.
Pretty easy to see how a car was maintained, though you don't know
everything. If you have good ear and feel for how a car should run,
all it takes is drive a and a look-see in the engine compartment.
I've stuck with 2.0/2.2 and 2.8/3.1 series engines since I dropped the
350's, so I know them well. Never been hit by a big expense.
Might be some luck there. Even new cars sometimes turn out bad.
But some people only want a new car. I can understand that.
I like that. I like that a lot. And I like even better the high
depreciation of GM cars. That's how I could retire at 59 1/2.
Different strokes, but 4-stroke is best. With pushrods.

--Vic
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-28 18:54:01 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 05:42:31 -0600, Vic Smith
Post by Vic Smith
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 05:39:53 -0500, "Elmo P. Shagnasty"
Post by Elmo P. Shagnasty
Post by Mike Hunter
Nothing, if that is what one has to do, but my question was WHY buy used
when one can afford to buy new?
When one buys a used vehicle one can never know for sure how that vehicles
was used or abused, or if it was properly maintained or not. When does one
generally have the most problems with ANY vehicle, during the first 50,000
or the last?
When one buys used THEY are loosing the beginning mileage, the mileage that
is most likely covered by a warranty. What has one gained, IF one can
afford to buy new rather than used?
Because one chooses not to spend his money that way. If you choose
well, you don't have to worry about loosing the beginning/warranty
mileage.
But since you're biased against GM, it's no wonder you think the way you
do. If you put a gun to my head and told me I had to drive a GM, I'd
avoid used like the plague, just like you.
That goes against your argument about depreciation. Best to get the
car that depreciates most, all else being equal. Unless you're biased
of course. Then you get into a situation that happens with Toyota or
Honda, where you sometimes see 1 or 2 year old used cars selling near
new car prices.
Then Mike is right about buying new.
But his other arguments just show he doesn't know how to select a good
used car. I can easily find a GM car for $2500-4000 that's good for
100k miles. Here it'll rust out before I add that many miles to it
anyway. Might put a few hundred bucks in it up front to fix some
minor items, then maintenance expense is chump change.
Done it more than once. 5-8 years old is the sweet spot.
Had my '90 Corsica since '98 and my '97 Lumina since '02.
Each cost me $2500 from private owners. Put about 50k miles on each.
Doesn't take a mathematician to see how much money I could put in my
bank account. Add a couple other $2500 Corsicas and a $3500 Grand Am
I bought for my kids as their first cars.
Pretty easy to see how a car was maintained, though you don't know
everything. If you have good ear and feel for how a car should run,
all it takes is drive a and a look-see in the engine compartment.
I've stuck with 2.0/2.2 and 2.8/3.1 series engines since I dropped the
350's, so I know them well. Never been hit by a big expense.
Might be some luck there. Even new cars sometimes turn out bad.
But some people only want a new car. I can understand that.
I like that. I like that a lot. And I like even better the high
depreciation of GM cars. That's how I could retire at 59 1/2.
Different strokes, but 4-stroke is best. With pushrods.
--Vic
A $2500 midsized GM or a $5000 Chrysler or Ford of the same age (aprox
5 years) shows the "value" of the vehicles. My Fords and Chryslers
outlast my GMs by enough that I don't bother with GMs any more.
At $10,000 for Honda, Toyota etc for the same age, I'll put up with
Chrysler and Ford - although I'd rather drive some of the Honda and
Toyota offerings.
Money talks, and I do most of my own servicing and repairs.
The less required the better,ut at least the little stuff doesn't kill
me financially.

On my GM there was no such thing as "little stuff" Didn't have a LOT
of trouble, but it was all the more major stuff.

My only NEW vehicle gave me more grief than any two used cars I've
owned, except the GM.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 20:41:45 UTC
Permalink
Perhaps you should be looking for a better job?
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 05:42:31 -0600, Vic Smith
Post by Vic Smith
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 05:39:53 -0500, "Elmo P. Shagnasty"
Post by Elmo P. Shagnasty
Post by Mike Hunter
Nothing, if that is what one has to do, but my question was WHY buy used
when one can afford to buy new?
When one buys a used vehicle one can never know for sure how that vehicles
was used or abused, or if it was properly maintained or not. When does one
generally have the most problems with ANY vehicle, during the first 50,000
or the last?
When one buys used THEY are loosing the beginning mileage, the mileage that
is most likely covered by a warranty. What has one gained, IF one can
afford to buy new rather than used?
Because one chooses not to spend his money that way. If you choose
well, you don't have to worry about loosing the beginning/warranty
mileage.
But since you're biased against GM, it's no wonder you think the way you
do. If you put a gun to my head and told me I had to drive a GM, I'd
avoid used like the plague, just like you.
That goes against your argument about depreciation. Best to get the
car that depreciates most, all else being equal. Unless you're biased
of course. Then you get into a situation that happens with Toyota or
Honda, where you sometimes see 1 or 2 year old used cars selling near
new car prices.
Then Mike is right about buying new.
But his other arguments just show he doesn't know how to select a good
used car. I can easily find a GM car for $2500-4000 that's good for
100k miles. Here it'll rust out before I add that many miles to it
anyway. Might put a few hundred bucks in it up front to fix some
minor items, then maintenance expense is chump change.
Done it more than once. 5-8 years old is the sweet spot.
Had my '90 Corsica since '98 and my '97 Lumina since '02.
Each cost me $2500 from private owners. Put about 50k miles on each.
Doesn't take a mathematician to see how much money I could put in my
bank account. Add a couple other $2500 Corsicas and a $3500 Grand Am
I bought for my kids as their first cars.
Pretty easy to see how a car was maintained, though you don't know
everything. If you have good ear and feel for how a car should run,
all it takes is drive a and a look-see in the engine compartment.
I've stuck with 2.0/2.2 and 2.8/3.1 series engines since I dropped the
350's, so I know them well. Never been hit by a big expense.
Might be some luck there. Even new cars sometimes turn out bad.
But some people only want a new car. I can understand that.
I like that. I like that a lot. And I like even better the high
depreciation of GM cars. That's how I could retire at 59 1/2.
Different strokes, but 4-stroke is best. With pushrods.
--Vic
A $2500 midsized GM or a $5000 Chrysler or Ford of the same age (aprox
5 years) shows the "value" of the vehicles. My Fords and Chryslers
outlast my GMs by enough that I don't bother with GMs any more.
At $10,000 for Honda, Toyota etc for the same age, I'll put up with
Chrysler and Ford - although I'd rather drive some of the Honda and
Toyota offerings.
Money talks, and I do most of my own servicing and repairs.
The less required the better,ut at least the little stuff doesn't kill
me financially.
On my GM there was no such thing as "little stuff" Didn't have a LOT
of trouble, but it was all the more major stuff.
My only NEW vehicle gave me more grief than any two used cars I've
owned, except the GM.
Conscience
2010-01-28 20:50:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
Perhaps you should be looking for a better job?
Perhaps they just choose to let someone else eat the depreciation?
Vic Smith
2010-01-29 01:08:11 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 05:42:31 -0600, Vic Smith
Post by Vic Smith
That goes against your argument about depreciation. Best to get the
car that depreciates most, all else being equal. Unless you're biased
of course. Then you get into a situation that happens with Toyota or
Honda, where you sometimes see 1 or 2 year old used cars selling near
new car prices.
Then Mike is right about buying new.
But his other arguments just show he doesn't know how to select a good
used car. I can easily find a GM car for $2500-4000 that's good for
100k miles. Here it'll rust out before I add that many miles to it
anyway. Might put a few hundred bucks in it up front to fix some
minor items, then maintenance expense is chump change.
Done it more than once. 5-8 years old is the sweet spot.
Had my '90 Corsica since '98 and my '97 Lumina since '02.
Each cost me $2500 from private owners. Put about 50k miles on each.
Doesn't take a mathematician to see how much money I could put in my
bank account. Add a couple other $2500 Corsicas and a $3500 Grand Am
I bought for my kids as their first cars.
Pretty easy to see how a car was maintained, though you don't know
everything. If you have good ear and feel for how a car should run,
all it takes is drive a and a look-see in the engine compartment.
I've stuck with 2.0/2.2 and 2.8/3.1 series engines since I dropped the
350's, so I know them well. Never been hit by a big expense.
Might be some luck there. Even new cars sometimes turn out bad.
But some people only want a new car. I can understand that.
I like that. I like that a lot. And I like even better the high
depreciation of GM cars. That's how I could retire at 59 1/2.
Different strokes, but 4-stroke is best. With pushrods.
--Vic
A $2500 midsized GM or a $5000 Chrysler or Ford of the same age (aprox
5 years) shows the "value" of the vehicles. My Fords and Chryslers
outlast my GMs by enough that I don't bother with GMs any more.
"Value" is subjective with cars, not much different than clothes.
How much cost does that little gator logo add to a shirt?
Is that "value?"
Wonder how much the Toyota shutdown is affecting Toyota resale value
already. And it's got nothing to do with "reality." Perception
becomes reality.
If your comment about Ford/Chrysler vs GM is meant to suggest that
it's better to pay $5000 for a used Chrysler/Ford than $2500 for an
equivalent age/condition GM, it only indicates your perception of
reality, not mine.
If I can pay $2500 vs $5000 and get the same reliability/cost, I chose
the $2500 reality.
With the recent busting of financial balloons and debt, I suspect
*all* used car prices to escalate.
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
At $10,000 for Honda, Toyota etc for the same age, I'll put up with
Chrysler and Ford - although I'd rather drive some of the Honda and
Toyota offerings.
No accounting for tastes, so you should drive what you want to drive.
Personally, if a car is reliable, quiet on the highway, and decent on
gas, I'm okay with it. I'm not into logos, and I laugh at commercials
showing cars on mountain roads, not another car in sight, and just
music playing while the beautiful chick in the passenger seat smiles
at you as she touches the rich Corinthian leather with one hand and
your crotch with the other.
Somehow, my driving experience never works out like that.
Well, not for about 30 years anyway.
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
Money talks, and I do most of my own servicing and repairs.
The less required the better,ut at least the little stuff doesn't kill
me financially.
On my GM there was no such thing as "little stuff" Didn't have a LOT
of trouble, but it was all the more major stuff.
My only NEW vehicle gave me more grief than any two used cars I've
owned, except the GM.
My luck is better. Always small stuff. Going way back, my '76
Caprice needed trans work, which cost me maybe 6 bills, but I only
paid 9 bills for the car and drove it for years. Great road car.
I do my own maintenance/repairs (actually now I mostly watch my
wrencher kid do it) but when I was working and commuting I used a good
mech who wasn't cheap, but fair. Still didn't spend much on fixes.
In the last 40 years of the wife and I commuting while driving cheap
Chevys we had 2 tows. Ignition switch failed on '90 Corsica and the
ECU on my '88 Celebrity. Even including the tows, it didn't add to
500 bucks total for both fixes.
I probably could get the same reliability with a Ford or Chryco if I
got into them enough to know the right engine/trans combos and the
quirks, but I figure concentrating on knowing one make very well has
worked out fine. Gives me a big edge.
Buying cheap cars only works if you know what you're doing.
If I had no interest in wrenching at all, I'd just buy a new Corolla.
No thinking about it, and cheaper in the long run.
When somebody who has no knowledge or interest in the mechanics of
cars asks me for car buying advice, but money is tight, I won't
recommend any used car. Too much like a box of chocolates.
Get a new Corolla. No surprises.

--Vic
Elmo P. Shagnasty
2010-01-29 01:36:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Vic Smith
No accounting for tastes, so you should drive what you want to drive.
Personally, if a car is reliable, quiet on the highway, and decent on
gas, I'm okay with it.
Is "runs reliably" and "doesn't cost a fortune in repairs, both money
and time" anywhere in your equation for being "okay" with it?

'Cuz it is in mine.
Vic Smith
2010-01-29 02:46:37 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 20:36:55 -0500, "Elmo P. Shagnasty"
Post by Elmo P. Shagnasty
Post by Vic Smith
No accounting for tastes, so you should drive what you want to drive.
Personally, if a car is reliable, quiet on the highway, and decent on
gas, I'm okay with it.
Is "runs reliably" and "doesn't cost a fortune in repairs, both money
and time" anywhere in your equation for being "okay" with it?
'Cuz it is in mine.
I spelled all that out in what you clipped. Reliable is reliable.
If it's always getting expensive repairs, "reliable" doesn't enter in.
Pretty simple. No sense parsing it.
If I say, as I did, that I had 2 tows in 40 years of 2 people
driving/commuting/vacationing in old and cheap Chevys, and that my
repairs were always cheap, what's hard to understand about that?
Maybe you don't think that's "reliable." That's okay with me.
Maybe I should also say that any fixes outside of the 2 tows, whether
by me or my mech were scheduled, and didn't unduly inconvenience me.
There, I said it.
I was really thinking of the tech group when I was talking, so maybe
it isn't clear to everybody.
For me, putting a 20-40 buck water pump. or a 100 buck alt, or a 150
buck PS pump on a Chevy is less than an hour in my garage, and they
all give warning before failure. Not saying it happens all the time,
but it can be expected on the older Chevys I've bought.
I almost always end up putting a water pump and alt in a high mileage
(+100k) Chevy. Less often a PS pump. It's always a one-time deal,
but you can expect to do that. The pumps and alts on GM's just don't
have the quality/longevity you find on Toys.
That's one reason the cars sell for less. People don't want to - or
can't - deal with it. Doesn't bother me at all.
If it did, I be driving new Hondas or Toyotas, and still be working
instead of retired. Though I like working on cars, I like retirement
even better.
Everybody picks their own route.

--Vic
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-29 04:23:02 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 19:08:11 -0600, Vic Smith
Post by Vic Smith
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 05:42:31 -0600, Vic Smith
Post by Vic Smith
That goes against your argument about depreciation. Best to get the
car that depreciates most, all else being equal. Unless you're biased
of course. Then you get into a situation that happens with Toyota or
Honda, where you sometimes see 1 or 2 year old used cars selling near
new car prices.
Then Mike is right about buying new.
But his other arguments just show he doesn't know how to select a good
used car. I can easily find a GM car for $2500-4000 that's good for
100k miles. Here it'll rust out before I add that many miles to it
anyway. Might put a few hundred bucks in it up front to fix some
minor items, then maintenance expense is chump change.
Done it more than once. 5-8 years old is the sweet spot.
Had my '90 Corsica since '98 and my '97 Lumina since '02.
Each cost me $2500 from private owners. Put about 50k miles on each.
Doesn't take a mathematician to see how much money I could put in my
bank account. Add a couple other $2500 Corsicas and a $3500 Grand Am
I bought for my kids as their first cars.
Pretty easy to see how a car was maintained, though you don't know
everything. If you have good ear and feel for how a car should run,
all it takes is drive a and a look-see in the engine compartment.
I've stuck with 2.0/2.2 and 2.8/3.1 series engines since I dropped the
350's, so I know them well. Never been hit by a big expense.
Might be some luck there. Even new cars sometimes turn out bad.
But some people only want a new car. I can understand that.
I like that. I like that a lot. And I like even better the high
depreciation of GM cars. That's how I could retire at 59 1/2.
Different strokes, but 4-stroke is best. With pushrods.
--Vic
A $2500 midsized GM or a $5000 Chrysler or Ford of the same age (aprox
5 years) shows the "value" of the vehicles. My Fords and Chryslers
outlast my GMs by enough that I don't bother with GMs any more.
"Value" is subjective with cars, not much different than clothes.
How much cost does that little gator logo add to a shirt?
Is that "value?"
Wonder how much the Toyota shutdown is affecting Toyota resale value
already. And it's got nothing to do with "reality." Perception
becomes reality.
If your comment about Ford/Chrysler vs GM is meant to suggest that
it's better to pay $5000 for a used Chrysler/Ford than $2500 for an
equivalent age/condition GM, it only indicates your perception of
reality, not mine.
If I can pay $2500 vs $5000 and get the same reliability/cost, I chose
the $2500 reality.
Hey, I agree with you 100% - but the reality for me has been I don't
GET the same reliability. Nor has anyone in my family, or many of my
friends. If you buy NEW vehicles and keep them 5 years, GM is mabee
as good as Ford or Chrysler. In some ways mabee even better. But
buying 5 year old vehicles I've not found that to be true. The cost of
operation for the second and third five year period is higher.
Significantly. And Cadilac? Don't even get me started.

Some of the Chrysler and Ford stuff is a bit harder to work on than
some of the GM stuff, perhaps, but some of the GM stuff is also harder
to work on than some of the other Ford or Chryco stuff - so that all
boils down to what you buy. My Mystique and PT are both miserable to
work on. My aerostars were too - but absolutely no worse than that
dang TransSport!!! And I don't need to work on them as often.

They are all harder to work on than my Corolla and Tercel were - and I
DO need to do more work on them than I did on the Toys - but not
enough difference for me to pay the premium for the used Toy or Honda
at this stage in my life.. I will, however, pay a premium NOT to have
to work on a GM....
Just my preference, from MY experience.

The best car I've owned, cost and repairs per mile, in the last 25
years has been the old 1988 New Yorker I sold back in '06.

Total cost of ownership, not counting oil, gas, insurance, licence and
tires, was less than $500 per year over the 12 years I owned it.
And it always looked good and rode well - right to the end.



(and I've been a licenced mechanic since age 19 in 1971)
Post by Vic Smith
With the recent busting of financial balloons and debt, I suspect
*all* used car prices to escalate.
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
At $10,000 for Honda, Toyota etc for the same age, I'll put up with
Chrysler and Ford - although I'd rather drive some of the Honda and
Toyota offerings.
No accounting for tastes, so you should drive what you want to drive.
Personally, if a car is reliable, quiet on the highway, and decent on
gas, I'm okay with it. I'm not into logos, and I laugh at commercials
showing cars on mountain roads, not another car in sight, and just
music playing while the beautiful chick in the passenger seat smiles
at you as she touches the rich Corinthian leather with one hand and
your crotch with the other.
Somehow, my driving experience never works out like that.
Well, not for about 30 years anyway.
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
Money talks, and I do most of my own servicing and repairs.
The less required the better,ut at least the little stuff doesn't kill
me financially.
On my GM there was no such thing as "little stuff" Didn't have a LOT
of trouble, but it was all the more major stuff.
My only NEW vehicle gave me more grief than any two used cars I've
owned, except the GM.
My luck is better. Always small stuff. Going way back, my '76
Caprice needed trans work, which cost me maybe 6 bills, but I only
paid 9 bills for the car and drove it for years. Great road car.
I do my own maintenance/repairs (actually now I mostly watch my
wrencher kid do it) but when I was working and commuting I used a good
mech who wasn't cheap, but fair. Still didn't spend much on fixes.
In the last 40 years of the wife and I commuting while driving cheap
Chevys we had 2 tows. Ignition switch failed on '90 Corsica and the
ECU on my '88 Celebrity. Even including the tows, it didn't add to
500 bucks total for both fixes.
I probably could get the same reliability with a Ford or Chryco if I
got into them enough to know the right engine/trans combos and the
quirks, but I figure concentrating on knowing one make very well has
worked out fine. Gives me a big edge.
Buying cheap cars only works if you know what you're doing.
If I had no interest in wrenching at all, I'd just buy a new Corolla.
No thinking about it, and cheaper in the long run.
When somebody who has no knowledge or interest in the mechanics of
cars asks me for car buying advice, but money is tight, I won't
recommend any used car. Too much like a box of chocolates.
Get a new Corolla. No surprises.
--Vic
Vic Smith
2010-01-29 05:52:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
Hey, I agree with you 100% - but the reality for me has been I don't
GET the same reliability. Nor has anyone in my family, or many of my
friends. If you buy NEW vehicles and keep them 5 years, GM is mabee
as good as Ford or Chrysler. In some ways mabee even better. But
buying 5 year old vehicles I've not found that to be true. The cost of
operation for the second and third five year period is higher.
Significantly. And Cadilac? Don't even get me started.
You have to talk specific cars. Saying GM, Chrysler, Ford don't do it.
Lots of variation. You couldn't give me a Cadillac.
My son takes care of his gal's 1990-something Caddy - think it's a
Deville. He's done some work on it, and his main complaint is the
parts cost. But he loves wrenching.
I stick with Chevys, though I also have a '93 Grand Am in my garage.
Going to dump the '90 Corsica. Still runs good and looks decent, but
I dropped the insurance this month. Just too old, and the headliner
if coming down.
The Grand Am is a much nicer ride. 3500 engine. And I paid $3500 for
it about 7 years ago. Had about 80k miles on it, now at 140k miles.
Bought it for a daughter who was commuting Chicago/Champagne
every weekend while in college. Never did anything but brakes on it,
but it threw a quad 4 driver code on her a couple times, and stalled.
And the A/C gave up.
Then she suddenly graduated, got a job teaching and left the car at my
house saying it wouldn't move off right away when you pressed the gas.
Didn't want it. She already had a Corolla then.
When it warmed up my son saw a puddle of trans fluid under it.
Leaky trans pan gasket, which he replaced. That's why it was giving
her problems - trans fluid was almost off the stick.
A steth pinned down an engine noise to the water pump, and we replaced
that. Unlike the 3.1's had to jack the engine and take off a motor
mount to get at the pump. So it was a 2 hour job versus a 15 minute
job. It sounds real sweet now, but I haven't driven it enough to know
what's in store. Though it hasn't happened to me yet, the quad 4
driver issue isn't resolved.
Free car now anyway.
But I don't know what you mean about GM's "The cost of
operation for the second and third five year period is higher."
Means nothing without talking about a specific car and the specific
repair.
At $2500-3500 for the car, it's already 5-10 years old anyway.
I usually expect to get only another 5-10 years before rust gets it.
Rinse and repeat.

--Vic
Elmo P. Shagnasty
2010-01-28 22:59:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by Vic Smith
Post by Elmo P. Shagnasty
But since you're biased against GM, it's no wonder you think the way you
do. If you put a gun to my head and told me I had to drive a GM, I'd
avoid used like the plague, just like you.
That goes against your argument about depreciation. Best to get the
car that depreciates most, all else being equal.
All else being equal, yes. Get a two year old Taurus and drive it.

But all else isn't equal. A two year old Taurus is half used. A two
year old Honda is barely used.

It can be a difficult decision to make. Many times, it makes sense to
buy the Honda new.
Elmo P. Shagnasty
2010-01-28 10:38:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
No, not if that's all one can afford, but why would anyone want something
that the previous owner(s) no longer wanted, if one could afford a new
vehicle?
Because one chooses not to spend his money on something that is
fundamentally priced and valued way, way differently in the market than
is a washer and dryer?

Because there's this huge depreciation hit one takes on driving a new
car off the lot, at which point the TRUE value of the car becomes
apparent?

Some people like chocolate, some don't. Some people like to spend their
money on that depreciation hit, some don't.

Used cars aren't necessarily something the previous owner no longer
wanted; many of them are repos, cars that idiots couldn't afford. They
wanted to show off the lifestyle but couldn't afford to keep it up.

I'd rather put my money into Hawaii vacations than into "look at me, I
got myself a new car!"
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-28 18:44:40 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 05:38:12 -0500, "Elmo P. Shagnasty"
Post by Elmo P. Shagnasty
Post by Mike Hunter
No, not if that's all one can afford, but why would anyone want something
that the previous owner(s) no longer wanted, if one could afford a new
vehicle?
Because one chooses not to spend his money on something that is
fundamentally priced and valued way, way differently in the market than
is a washer and dryer?
Because there's this huge depreciation hit one takes on driving a new
car off the lot, at which point the TRUE value of the car becomes
apparent?
Some people like chocolate, some don't. Some people like to spend their
money on that depreciation hit, some don't.
Used cars aren't necessarily something the previous owner no longer
wanted; many of them are repos, cars that idiots couldn't afford. They
wanted to show off the lifestyle but couldn't afford to keep it up.
I'd rather put my money into Hawaii vacations than into "look at me, I
got myself a new car!"
And I'd rather buy a used car that was owned by someone who trades
every few years for vanity's sake (and takes care of it) than a repo
from someone who couldnt afford to take care of even the basics.

Just my bias.
I buy 5 year old cars for roughly 1/4 price (or less) and drive them
another 10 or more years. If I get 10 years out of them, my
depreciation coat is $500 per year, assuming I have to throw the car
away when I'm done.
Last $5500 car (was $35000 when it left the lot new) was still worth
$1700 when I sold it 12 years later (at 18 years of age)
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 20:39:48 UTC
Permalink
Perhaps but my reference was to one who can afforded a new car, not one who
obviously can not afford a new car.

You have not calculated in all of your repair costs, lost time when the used
car is out of service, and the fact that you or your family could be in
jeopardy when you breakdown in an unsafe area.

That old saw the "there's this huge depreciation hit one takes on driving a
new car off the lot, is just crap. Who sells a vehicle as soon as they
drive it home? The average new vehicle buyer in the US replaces that
vehicle, with another new vehicle, in three to four years with 45,000 to
60,000 miles on the odometer.

I trade every two years and currently it only cost me around $2,500 to
$3,000 per year to replace my cars. All I need to do for two years is
three oil changes and one annual inspection. I haven't purchased so much as
a tire, in over thirty years.

If one buys a new car every ten years, he will average more than $2,500 to
$3,000 per year in deprecation, maintenance, parts and repairs, as well as
well as an unknown amount of loss of use time. In addition you will need
another $10,000 to cover the higher purchase price for the same type of car
at the time

I own a half dozen collector cars, I know what it costs to keep them in tip
top condition.

In 1980 the price of a midsize car was $8,000. In 1990 the price of a
midsize car was $18,000
In 2010 the price of a midsize car was $28,000.
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
On Thu, 28 Jan 2010 05:38:12 -0500, "Elmo P. Shagnasty"
Post by Elmo P. Shagnasty
Post by Mike Hunter
No, not if that's all one can afford, but why would anyone want something
that the previous owner(s) no longer wanted, if one could afford a new
vehicle?
Because one chooses not to spend his money on something that is
fundamentally priced and valued way, way differently in the market than
is a washer and dryer?
Because there's this huge depreciation hit one takes on driving a new
car off the lot, at which point the TRUE value of the car becomes
apparent?
Some people like chocolate, some don't. Some people like to spend their
money on that depreciation hit, some don't.
Used cars aren't necessarily something the previous owner no longer
wanted; many of them are repos, cars that idiots couldn't afford. They
wanted to show off the lifestyle but couldn't afford to keep it up.
I'd rather put my money into Hawaii vacations than into "look at me, I
got myself a new car!"
And I'd rather buy a used car that was owned by someone who trades
every few years for vanity's sake (and takes care of it) than a repo
from someone who couldnt afford to take care of even the basics.
Just my bias.
I buy 5 year old cars for roughly 1/4 price (or less) and drive them
another 10 or more years. If I get 10 years out of them, my
depreciation coat is $500 per year, assuming I have to throw the car
away when I'm done.
Last $5500 car (was $35000 when it left the lot new) was still worth
$1700 when I sold it 12 years later (at 18 years of age)
Elmo P. Shagnasty
2010-01-28 23:01:50 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
Perhaps but my reference was to one who can afforded a new car, not one who
obviously can not afford a new car.
you missed the entire point: just because one CAN afford a new car,
doesn't mean one CHOOSES to spend the money on it.

Sam Walton drove an old pickup truck.

I think Warren Buffett drives a modest car. I know he lives in a modest
house.

Usually it's those who feel the need to show off by spending money that
are the poorest.
Scott Dorsey
2010-01-28 13:17:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
No, not if that's all one can afford, but why would anyone want something
that the previous owner(s) no longer wanted, if one could afford a new
vehicle? Do you buy used clothing, appliances and furniture as well?
Yes. Do you like to waste money?
--scott
--
"C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
SMS
2010-01-27 06:30:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by jr92
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into
the likes of a Toyota.
Yeah, you want to put them into a vehicle where the manufacturer fights
to the end to not fix safety issues, not one where the manufacturer
acknowledges potential problems and fixes them.

What an idiot.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-27 17:18:56 UTC
Permalink
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
Post by SMS
Post by jr92
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into
the likes of a Toyota.
Yeah, you want to put them into a vehicle where the manufacturer fights
to the end to not fix safety issues, not one where the manufacturer
acknowledges potential problems and fixes them.
What an idiot.
Tom
2010-01-27 19:47:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
Post by SMS
Post by jr92
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into
the likes of a Toyota.
Yeah, you want to put them into a vehicle where the manufacturer fights
to the end to not fix safety issues, not one where the manufacturer
acknowledges potential problems and fixes them.
What an idiot.
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-27 21:27:21 UTC
Permalink
They "gave" is Sochi?
Post by Tom
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
Post by SMS
Post by jr92
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into
the likes of a Toyota.
Yeah, you want to put them into a vehicle where the manufacturer fights
to the end to not fix safety issues, not one where the manufacturer
acknowledges potential problems and fixes them.
What an idiot.
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until
they finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Sir F. A. Rien
2010-01-27 22:28:50 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
Post by SMS
Post by jr92
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into
the likes of a Toyota.
Yeah, you want to put them into a vehicle where the manufacturer fights
to the end to not fix safety issues, not one where the manufacturer
acknowledges potential problems and fixes them.
What an idiot.
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?

That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.

Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
Tom
2010-01-27 22:48:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by Sir F. A. Rien
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
Post by SMS
Post by jr92
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into
the likes of a Toyota.
Yeah, you want to put them into a vehicle where the manufacturer fights
to the end to not fix safety issues, not one where the manufacturer
acknowledges potential problems and fixes them.
What an idiot.
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?
That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.
Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
Toyota has only known about this problem since2007
Toyota first identified problems with the accelerator pedals on its Tundra
pickup in March 2007. After months of testing, the company determined that
the problem was caused by the material in the accelerators' friction lever
and made a change.

At that time, Toyota considered it to be a drivability issue unrelated to
safety, according to its filing with the U.S. National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration. A similar issue then arose in Europe in December 2008
in the right-hand-drive versions of two small Toyota cars, the Aygo and
Yaris.

The company's investigation found that condensation from heaters caused
increased friction in the gas pedal, making it stick in some cases. Toyota
lengthened the arm of the friction lever and changed its materials on all
vehicles produced in Europe using the subject accelerator pedals starting in
mid-August 2009.

Beginning in October last year, Toyota became aware of sticking accelerator
pedals in the U.S. and Canada. The company realized that the material used
in
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 00:34:38 UTC
Permalink
How does that account for the fact vehicles with the fly by wire system also
have the runaway problem, according to A.N.?
Post by Tom
Post by Sir F. A. Rien
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
Post by SMS
Post by jr92
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into
the likes of a Toyota.
Yeah, you want to put them into a vehicle where the manufacturer fights
to the end to not fix safety issues, not one where the manufacturer
acknowledges potential problems and fixes them.
What an idiot.
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?
That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.
Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
Toyota has only known about this problem since2007
Toyota first identified problems with the accelerator pedals on its Tundra
pickup in March 2007. After months of testing, the company determined that
the problem was caused by the material in the accelerators' friction lever
and made a change.
At that time, Toyota considered it to be a drivability issue unrelated to
safety, according to its filing with the U.S. National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration. A similar issue then arose in Europe in December
2008 in the right-hand-drive versions of two small Toyota cars, the Aygo
and Yaris.
The company's investigation found that condensation from heaters caused
increased friction in the gas pedal, making it stick in some cases. Toyota
lengthened the arm of the friction lever and changed its materials on all
vehicles produced in Europe using the subject accelerator pedals starting
in mid-August 2009.
Beginning in October last year, Toyota became aware of sticking
accelerator pedals in the U.S. and Canada. The company realized that the
material used in
Sir F. A. Rien
2010-01-28 18:04:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tom
Post by Sir F. A. Rien
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
Post by SMS
Post by jr92
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into
the likes of a Toyota.
Yeah, you want to put them into a vehicle where the manufacturer fights
to the end to not fix safety issues, not one where the manufacturer
acknowledges potential problems and fixes them.
What an idiot.
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?
That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.
Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
Toyota has only known about this problem since2007
Toyota first identified problems with the accelerator pedals on its Tundra
pickup in March 2007. After months of testing, the company determined that
the problem was caused by the material in the accelerators' friction lever
and made a change.
At that time, Toyota considered it to be a drivability issue unrelated to
safety, according to its filing with the U.S. National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration. A similar issue then arose in Europe in December 2008
in the right-hand-drive versions of two small Toyota cars, the Aygo and
Yaris.
The company's investigation found that condensation from heaters caused
increased friction in the gas pedal, making it stick in some cases. Toyota
lengthened the arm of the friction lever and changed its materials on all
vehicles produced in Europe using the subject accelerator pedals starting in
mid-August 2009.
Beginning in October last year, Toyota became aware of sticking accelerator
pedals in the U.S. and Canada. The company realized that the material used
in
Bulk, canned response?

-=or=- can't you read?
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 00:31:11 UTC
Permalink
Is that different than Toyota importing most of the materials, as well as
most of the models it sells in the US?
Post by Sir F. A. Rien
Post by Mike Hunter
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?
That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.
Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
dr_jeff
2010-01-28 00:45:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
Is that different than Toyota importing most of the materials, as well as
most of the models it sells in the US?
Yet it builds most of the cars it sells in North America. And most of
the parts in the those cars come from the US, too.

Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Sir F. A. Rien
Post by Mike Hunter
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?
That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.
Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 01:26:42 UTC
Permalink
You can continue to believe that if you wish, but the US Commerce Department
says most of what Toyota sells is in the US is imported and those vehicles
and the parts they do ASSEMBLE in the US are assembled of imported
MATERIALS. Even Toyota says "assembled in the US, of world sourced parts
and materials."
Post by Mike Hunter
Is that different than Toyota importing most of the materials, as well as
most of the models it sells in the US?
Yet it builds most of the cars it sells in North America. And most of the
parts in the those cars come from the US, too.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Sir F. A. Rien
Post by Mike Hunter
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?
That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.
Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
dr_jeff
2010-01-28 01:38:02 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
You can continue to believe that if you wish, but the US Commerce Department
says most of what Toyota sells is in the US is imported and those vehicles
and the parts they do ASSEMBLE in the US are assembled of imported
MATERIALS. Even Toyota says "assembled in the US, of world sourced parts
and materials."
The Commerce Department doesn't say anything about it. The NHTSA tracks
that stuff.

So please either show us the URL of the site that has this info or stop
making a fool of yourself.

And do you think that GM and Ford only use parts from the US? If you do,
you are as stupid as you sound.

Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Mike Hunter
Is that different than Toyota importing most of the materials, as well as
most of the models it sells in the US?
Yet it builds most of the cars it sells in North America. And most of the
parts in the those cars come from the US, too.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Sir F. A. Rien
Post by Mike Hunter
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?
That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.
Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 02:25:52 UTC
Permalink
Of course GM and Ford must buy some of their parts off shore, dummy. They
must do so to compete with imports that have the cost advantage of getting
most of their materials off shore, or make most of their vehicles off shore,
where labor is cheaper and their are fewer environmental regulation that add
to the cost of production in the US.
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
You can continue to believe that if you wish, but the US Commerce
Department says most of what Toyota sells is in the US is imported and
those vehicles and the parts they do ASSEMBLE in the US are assembled of
imported MATERIALS. Even Toyota says "assembled in the US, of world
sourced parts and materials."
The Commerce Department doesn't say anything about it. The NHTSA tracks
that stuff.
So please either show us the URL of the site that has this info or stop
making a fool of yourself.
And do you think that GM and Ford only use parts from the US? If you do,
you are as stupid as you sound.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Is that different than Toyota importing most of the materials, as well
as most of the models it sells in the US?
Yet it builds most of the cars it sells in North America. And most of
the parts in the those cars come from the US, too.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Sir F. A. Rien
Post by Mike Hunter
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?
That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.
Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-28 02:12:06 UTC
Permalink
On Wed, 27 Jan 2010 20:26:42 -0500, "Mike Hunter"
Post by Mike Hunter
You can continue to believe that if you wish, but the US Commerce Department
says most of what Toyota sells is in the US is imported and those vehicles
and the parts they do ASSEMBLE in the US are assembled of imported
MATERIALS. Even Toyota says "assembled in the US, of world sourced parts
and materials."
So does Ford and GM. Except those built in Mexico of world sourced
parts and materials
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Mike Hunter
Is that different than Toyota importing most of the materials, as well as
most of the models it sells in the US?
Yet it builds most of the cars it sells in North America. And most of the
parts in the those cars come from the US, too.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Sir F. A. Rien
Post by Mike Hunter
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?
That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.
Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-28 02:03:17 UTC
Permalink
On Wed, 27 Jan 2010 19:31:11 -0500, "Mike Hunter"
Post by Mike Hunter
Is that different than Toyota importing most of the materials, as well as
most of the models it sells in the US?
Post by Sir F. A. Rien
Post by Mike Hunter
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
Guess you missed the information that they make the cars in the US and
supply US workers with a living?
That's as against Flipping Ford who assembles in MEXICO with foreign made
parts.
Remember to salute [right arm extended] when you look at a Chrysler product.
Where is the iron for the "imported" steel from? ANd you would be
surprised how MUCH of the North American Totota is actually built in
North America (using imported parts, just like every North American
"built" car).
Noth America produces virtually no electronics components any more,
and very little heat treated iron or steel parts, or plated parts, due
to environmental legislation (among other factors)
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-28 01:56:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tom
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
Post by SMS
Post by jr92
Myself,
I value my loved ones' well-being too much to risk putting them into
the likes of a Toyota.
Yeah, you want to put them into a vehicle where the manufacturer fights
to the end to not fix safety issues, not one where the manufacturer
acknowledges potential problems and fixes them.
What an idiot.
All Hail Toyota I will stick behind them to the end, or at least until they
finish raping America while
closing their markets. fixing the price of their yen, Just remember
these people do not like us only our money
and the protection we provide. name something they have done for us.
One HECK of a lot more than the Chinese!!!!!!!
ben91932
2010-01-27 20:26:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
GM: Rolling Corvairs and full size cars that broke motor mounts and
locked the steering.
Several hundred dead.
Ford: Exploding mustang gas tanks in the '60's which Ford knew about
and remedied by making the Pinto.
Several hundred more dead.
These issues were known by the car makers before the cars were sold.
Their accountants calculated that the loss of life, lawsuits etc would
cost less overall than the $15 to $17 a car it would have cost them to
make them safe.
Ben
Mike Hunter
2010-01-27 21:28:36 UTC
Permalink
Old news, Toyota is killing folks TODAY with their so called superior cars
and SUVs
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
GM: Rolling Corvairs and full size cars that broke motor mounts and
locked the steering.
Several hundred dead.
Ford: Exploding mustang gas tanks in the '60's which Ford knew about
and remedied by making the Pinto.
Several hundred more dead.
These issues were known by the car makers before the cars were sold.
Their accountants calculated that the loss of life, lawsuits etc would
cost less overall than the $15 to $17 a car it would have cost them to
make them safe.
Ben
jr92
2010-01-29 04:42:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by ben91932
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
GM: Rolling Corvairs and full size cars that broke motor mounts and
locked the steering.
Several hundred dead.
Ford: Exploding mustang gas tanks in the '60's which Ford knew about
and remedied by making the Pinto.
Several hundred more dead.
These issues were known by the car makers before the cars were sold.
Their accountants calculated that the loss of life, lawsuits etc would
cost less overall than the $15 to $17 a car it would have cost them to
make them safe.
Ben
I promise, if you guys will quit bringing up unsafe US nameplates
built 40 years ago, I will not bring up the DEATHTRAPS that Toyota and
Honda sold in the US 40 years ago!
Mike Hunter
2010-01-29 16:03:57 UTC
Permalink
It is known as the "Yabut" defense. When one can no longer come up with a
reasonable positions in defense for their side of a discussion at hand, they
resort to non-germane old subjects, to deflect from the discussion. "Ya but
what about....." LOL
Post by Mike Hunter
What manufacturer ever refused to fix vehicles with a safety issue?
GM: Rolling Corvairs etc..
I promise, if you guys will quit bringing up unsafe US nameplates
built 40 years ago, I will not bring up the DEATHTRAPS that Toyota and
Honda sold in the US 40 years ago!
hls
2010-01-27 15:11:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mercedes did the same thing a few years ago with that ugly A class
a few years ago. They stopped sales and stopped all manufacture until
they got the engineering problem fixed. A lot better move, imo, than
the bandaid approach.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-27 17:19:55 UTC
Permalink
You mean like cutting off the bottom of the accelerator?
Post by hls
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mercedes did the same thing a few years ago with that ugly A class
a few years ago. They stopped sales and stopped all manufacture until
they got the engineering problem fixed. A lot better move, imo, than
the bandaid approach.
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-28 01:52:39 UTC
Permalink
On Wed, 27 Jan 2010 12:19:55 -0500, "Mike Hunter"
Post by Mike Hunter
You mean like cutting off the bottom of the accelerator?
Temporary attempt to fix an unproven problem - better than doing
nothing, IF it had been the problem.

To this point in time there is NO PROOF the throttles are sticking.
Much less any idea WHY or WHERE they are sticking.

Yes, some cars have "run away" and some people have been killed - but
no vehicle has had the throttle stick under controlled conditions or
in the hands of a technician who can then determine what went wrong.

VERY perplexing for the engineers, for sure.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by hls
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mercedes did the same thing a few years ago with that ugly A class
a few years ago. They stopped sales and stopped all manufacture until
they got the engineering problem fixed. A lot better move, imo, than
the bandaid approach.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 02:11:20 UTC
Permalink
You are correct Toyota has not clue as to why their cars, with various types
of throttle systems are going out of control, but the fact is they are going
out of control hence the federal sales stop order.
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
On Wed, 27 Jan 2010 12:19:55 -0500, "Mike Hunter"
Post by Mike Hunter
You mean like cutting off the bottom of the accelerator?
Temporary attempt to fix an unproven problem - better than doing
nothing, IF it had been the problem.
To this point in time there is NO PROOF the throttles are sticking.
Much less any idea WHY or WHERE they are sticking.
Yes, some cars have "run away" and some people have been killed - but
no vehicle has had the throttle stick under controlled conditions or
in the hands of a technician who can then determine what went wrong.
VERY perplexing for the engineers, for sure.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by hls
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mercedes did the same thing a few years ago with that ugly A class
a few years ago. They stopped sales and stopped all manufacture until
they got the engineering problem fixed. A lot better move, imo, than
the bandaid approach.
Ashton Crusher
2010-01-28 04:22:07 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
On Wed, 27 Jan 2010 12:19:55 -0500, "Mike Hunter"
Post by Mike Hunter
You mean like cutting off the bottom of the accelerator?
Temporary attempt to fix an unproven problem - better than doing
nothing, IF it had been the problem.
To this point in time there is NO PROOF the throttles are sticking.
Much less any idea WHY or WHERE they are sticking.
Yes, some cars have "run away" and some people have been killed - but
no vehicle has had the throttle stick under controlled conditions or
in the hands of a technician who can then determine what went wrong.
Nonsense. They just aired a story of a guy whose Toyota did the
"runaway" thing several times. The last time it did it he called the
Toyota dealer and said he was bringing it in and he did (by shifting
it in and out of gear as needed) and left it running for the tech to
look at. The tech verified that the throttle pedal was not stuck on
anything or sticking but the engine was racing and would not stop till
they shut the car off. Toyota KNOWS this is a REAL problem, not some
confusion on the customers part, or they would not have stopped
selling cars.
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
VERY perplexing for the engineers, for sure.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by hls
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mercedes did the same thing a few years ago with that ugly A class
a few years ago. They stopped sales and stopped all manufacture until
they got the engineering problem fixed. A lot better move, imo, than
the bandaid approach.
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-28 04:22:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
On Wed, 27 Jan 2010 12:19:55 -0500, "Mike Hunter"
Post by Mike Hunter
You mean like cutting off the bottom of the accelerator?
Temporary attempt to fix an unproven problem - better than doing
nothing, IF it had been the problem.
To this point in time there is NO PROOF the throttles are sticking.
Much less any idea WHY or WHERE they are sticking.
OK - More information is out.
It APPEARS the problem is with the one part that is common to both the
drive-by-wire and linkage vehicles - the design of the actual pedal
assembly. Apparently the pedal, under some conditions can bind - but I
can't for the life of me figure out how it could bind that you could
not pull it back by getting a toe under it.

Anyway, the supplier of the pedal is going crazy trying to get a
redisigned pedal into production at all of their plants across North
America. I don't know if it is a materials problem, or what, but if
the bushing (or the entire pedal) is made from, say, nylon, and the
clearances are small enough, absorbing moisture (which nylon is real
good at,) could cause the bushing to swell and bind on the pin.

The design of a floor mat could contribute to this if it holds
moisture in close proximity to the pedal pivot.

At any rate, millions more floormats have just been added to the
recall.

Hopefully within a few days more information will be released, and the
problem will be 100% solved.
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
Yes, some cars have "run away" and some people have been killed - but
no vehicle has had the throttle stick under controlled conditions or
in the hands of a technician who can then determine what went wrong.
VERY perplexing for the engineers, for sure.
Whether they have actually gotten pedals to stick "on command" or
whether the experience in europe has pointed them to the pedal design,
I have not heard. They must have thought the design was different
enough that the european experience did not apply directly to the
American vehicles or they would have addressed it much sooner.
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by hls
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mercedes did the same thing a few years ago with that ugly A class
a few years ago. They stopped sales and stopped all manufacture until
they got the engineering problem fixed. A lot better move, imo, than
the bandaid approach.
SMS
2010-01-28 23:41:18 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
Anyway, the supplier of the pedal is going crazy trying to get a
redisigned pedal into production at all of their plants across North
America.
Actually not just North America, and not just Toyota. I saw today that
some Fords build in Asia have the same issue with the pedal assembly
from the same Canadian supplier.

The key thing here is that Toyota was pro-active in issuing the recall
which they were not legally required to do (but the stop sale order is
something that they likely would have been ordered to do if they hadn't
done so voluntarily). If you look back on _far_ more serious safety
recalls on Ford and GM products, those companies were forced, kicking
and screaming, to do safety recalls.

It's one thing to fight a recall that is not safety related (i.e.
excessive oil burning) that doesn't have a direct impact on safety. I
remember VW fighting the recall on some their water-cooled engines where
valve stem seals had a problem, though eventually they capitulated.

Consumers are pretty reasonable. If they buy a product that turns out to
have a problem, and the manufacturer fixes the problem without a hassle,
then they're likely to continue as a loyal customer. The reason the U.S.
vehicle manufacturers got into such trouble is that they were so
arrogant that you still here the familiar story of "I bought a (GM,
Ford, Chrysler) once--never again." Toyota and Honda understood that the
key to a long term business plan was to keep selling more product to
happy repeat customers.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-27 17:10:50 UTC
Permalink
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes Pontiac.
GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Hachiroku ハチロク
2010-01-27 17:55:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And still haven't learned anything.

Government should have let them sink, except for the 68,000 union votes it
brings in.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 00:23:36 UTC
Permalink
How do you thinks that would that have prevented Toyotas massive safety
recall? LOL
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And still haven't learned anything.
Government should have let them sink, except for the 68,000 union votes it
brings in.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Hachiroku ハチロク
2010-01-27 20:17:01 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
How do you thinks that would that have prevented Toyotas massive safety
recall? LOL
It wouldn't. But I am betting GM has learned NOTHING and will keep making
the cheapest product possible to please the shareholders, and not the
customers.

Toyota will learn from this.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And still haven't learned anything.
Government should have let them sink, except for the 68,000 union votes
it brings in.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded
to make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 01:59:44 UTC
Permalink
Then why mention GM, when Toyota has the problem? Are you trying to make
Toyota look good?
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by Mike Hunter
How do you thinks that would that have prevented Toyotas massive safety
recall? LOL
It wouldn't. But I am betting GM has learned NOTHING and will keep making
the cheapest product possible to please the shareholders, and not the
customers.
Toyota will learn from this.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And still haven't learned anything.
Government should have let them sink, except for the 68,000 union votes
it brings in.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded
to make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Hachiroku ハチロク
2010-01-27 21:06:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
Then why mention GM, when Toyota has the problem? Are you trying to make
Toyota look good?
Why would I do that?

Just because they have had fewer, and less serious recalls than GM, even
though they have been selling cars all over the world since before WWII?
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by Mike Hunter
How do you thinks that would that have prevented Toyotas massive safety
recall? LOL
It wouldn't. But I am betting GM has learned NOTHING and will keep
making the cheapest product possible to please the shareholders, and not
the customers.
Toyota will learn from this.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And still haven't learned anything.
Government should have let them sink, except for the 68,000 union
votes it brings in.
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five
North American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight
models recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator
pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints
wleded to make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
dr_jeff
2010-01-27 22:58:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes Pontiac.
GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And, GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall and Wuling, Saab, Saturn and
Hummer. Of course, the last three brands will be closed down or sold.

Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 00:26:50 UTC
Permalink
Actually when you ever catch up you will discover SAAB and Hummer have been
sold, but that has nothing to do with Toyotas massive recall and the
government order to stop selling the cars involved.
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And, GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall and Wuling, Saab, Saturn and
Hummer. Of course, the last three brands will be closed down or sold.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
dr_jeff
2010-01-28 00:44:02 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
Actually when you ever catch up you will discover SAAB and Hummer have been
sold, but that has nothing to do with Toyotas massive recall and the
government order to stop selling the cars involved.
You might want to tell GM about the sales:
http://www.gm.com/corporate/about/global_operations/

GM still owns Saab, although a deal to sell it is close.

And it still lists Hummer as one of its brands.


Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And, GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall and Wuling, Saab, Saturn and
Hummer. Of course, the last three brands will be closed down or sold.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 01:21:16 UTC
Permalink
You are wrong again. The only brands owned by GM are Chevrolet, Buick,
Cadillac and GMC. Their former brands and their former manufacturing
facilities are "owned" by the bankruptcy court.
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Actually when you ever catch up you will discover SAAB and Hummer have
been sold, but that has nothing to do with Toyotas massive recall and the
government order to stop selling the cars involved.
http://www.gm.com/corporate/about/global_operations/
GM still owns Saab, although a deal to sell it is close.
And it still lists Hummer as one of its brands.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And, GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall and Wuling, Saab, Saturn and
Hummer. Of course, the last three brands will be closed down or sold.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
dr_jeff
2010-01-28 01:33:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
You are wrong again. The only brands owned by GM are Chevrolet, Buick,
Cadillac and GMC. Their former brands and their former manufacturing
facilities are "owned" by the bankruptcy court.
You are such a comedian. I never heard of a bankruptcy court owning
anything.

Technically, Saab, Saturn and Hummer are owned by Motors Liquidation
Co., the old GM.

The new GM also owns all or part of GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall,
AC Delco, GMAC, OnStar, Shanghai GM and Wuling. So GM owns more than
just Chevy, GMC, Caddy and Buick.

Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Actually when you ever catch up you will discover SAAB and Hummer have
been sold, but that has nothing to do with Toyotas massive recall and the
government order to stop selling the cars involved.
http://www.gm.com/corporate/about/global_operations/
GM still owns Saab, although a deal to sell it is close.
And it still lists Hummer as one of its brands.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And, GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall and Wuling, Saab, Saturn and
Hummer. Of course, the last three brands will be closed down or sold.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 02:08:05 UTC
Permalink
Duh and who controls all of that liquidation, dummy, not GM. Try again,
the subject is brands. One only owns something if one has controlling
interest. I wish the stock I own in FMC made me an owner. As a General
Motors stock holder, I wish what you believe were true.
Post by Mike Hunter
You are wrong again. The only brands owned by GM are Chevrolet, Buick,
Cadillac and GMC. Their former brands and their former manufacturing
facilities are "owned" by the bankruptcy court.
Technically, Saab, Saturn and Hummer are owned by Motors Liquidation Co.,
the old GM.
The new GM also owns all or part of GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall, AC
Delco, GMAC, OnStar, Shanghai GM and Wuling. So GM owns more than just
Chevy, GMC, Caddy and Buick.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Actually when you ever catch up you will discover SAAB and Hummer have
been sold, but that has nothing to do with Toyotas massive recall and
the government order to stop selling the cars involved.
http://www.gm.com/corporate/about/global_operations/
GM still owns Saab, although a deal to sell it is close.
And it still lists Hummer as one of its brands.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And, GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall and Wuling, Saab, Saturn and
Hummer. Of course, the last three brands will be closed down or sold.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
dr_jeff
2010-01-28 02:13:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
Duh and who controls all of that liquidation, dummy, not GM.
There is a huge difference between controlling a liquidation and owning
something.
Post by Mike Hunter
Try again,
the subject is brands. One only owns something if one has controlling
interest.
The bankruptcy court doesn't have controlling interest. Or any interest.
Rather, it is the creditors of FMC.
Post by Mike Hunter
I wish the stock I own in FMC made me an owner. As a General
Motors stock holder, I wish what you believe were true.
If you want, I can send you a crying towel.

Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Mike Hunter
You are wrong again. The only brands owned by GM are Chevrolet, Buick,
Cadillac and GMC. Their former brands and their former manufacturing
facilities are "owned" by the bankruptcy court.
Technically, Saab, Saturn and Hummer are owned by Motors Liquidation Co.,
the old GM.
The new GM also owns all or part of GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall, AC
Delco, GMAC, OnStar, Shanghai GM and Wuling. So GM owns more than just
Chevy, GMC, Caddy and Buick.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Actually when you ever catch up you will discover SAAB and Hummer have
been sold, but that has nothing to do with Toyotas massive recall and
the government order to stop selling the cars involved.
http://www.gm.com/corporate/about/global_operations/
GM still owns Saab, although a deal to sell it is close.
And it still lists Hummer as one of its brands.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And, GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall and Wuling, Saab, Saturn and
Hummer. Of course, the last three brands will be closed down or sold.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
c***@snyder.on.ca
2010-01-28 02:13:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
You are wrong again. The only brands owned by GM are Chevrolet, Buick,
Cadillac and GMC. Their former brands and their former manufacturing
facilities are "owned" by the bankruptcy court.
You are such a comedian. I never heard of a bankruptcy court owning
anything.
Technically, Saab, Saturn and Hummer are owned by Motors Liquidation
Co., the old GM.
The new GM also owns all or part of GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall,
AC Delco, GMAC, OnStar, Shanghai GM and Wuling. So GM owns more than
just Chevy, GMC, Caddy and Buick.
Jeff
Actually Holden has been wholly australian owned for close to 30
years. Still associated with General motors, but not part of GM World
operations.
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Actually when you ever catch up you will discover SAAB and Hummer have
been sold, but that has nothing to do with Toyotas massive recall and the
government order to stop selling the cars involved.
http://www.gm.com/corporate/about/global_operations/
GM still owns Saab, although a deal to sell it is close.
And it still lists Hummer as one of its brands.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And, GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall and Wuling, Saab, Saturn and
Hummer. Of course, the last three brands will be closed down or sold.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
dr_jeff
2010-01-28 02:18:16 UTC
Permalink
Actually, the name of the company is GM Holden Ltd.

And according to its own web page, its parent is GM.

http://www.holden.com.au/corporate/about-holden
Post by c***@snyder.on.ca
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
You are wrong again. The only brands owned by GM are Chevrolet, Buick,
Cadillac and GMC. Their former brands and their former manufacturing
facilities are "owned" by the bankruptcy court.
You are such a comedian. I never heard of a bankruptcy court owning
anything.
Technically, Saab, Saturn and Hummer are owned by Motors Liquidation
Co., the old GM.
The new GM also owns all or part of GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall,
AC Delco, GMAC, OnStar, Shanghai GM and Wuling. So GM owns more than
just Chevy, GMC, Caddy and Buick.
Jeff
Actually Holden has been wholly australian owned for close to 30
years. Still associated with General motors, but not part of GM World
operations.
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Actually when you ever catch up you will discover SAAB and Hummer have
been sold, but that has nothing to do with Toyotas massive recall and the
government order to stop selling the cars involved.
http://www.gm.com/corporate/about/global_operations/
GM still owns Saab, although a deal to sell it is close.
And it still lists Hummer as one of its brands.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by dr_jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
GM stopped production of the Fiero years ago and not longer makes
Pontiac. GM today is comprised of Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC
And, GM Daewoo, Holden, Opel, Vauxhall and Wuling, Saab, Saturn and
Hummer. Of course, the last three brands will be closed down or sold.
Jeff
Post by Mike Hunter
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
Gm would do well to learn from this. Burning Fieros, CV joints wleded to
make a FWD engine a RWD engine, etc.
Paul Hovnanian P.E.
2010-01-28 19:14:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models recalled
last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
It beats the system we used when I was at Boeing. All the PHBs visited
Japanese manufacturers to learn about lean manufacturing, continuous
quality improvement, etc. And the only idea they brought back was the
moving assembly line. Unlike Toyota, nothing stops our line. If a part
comes in late, its up to you to chase after the plane and get it bolted on.
This ad:
hit too close to home.

One of our assembly plants' hangar doors opened out towards Lake Washington.
We used to joke that, if the planes didn't pass QA, the line wouldn't
stop. We'd just push the failures into the lake.

IMO, Toyota has the right idea when it comes to fixing a quality problem.
Had the carpet bug not masked the problem with the pedal mechanism, they
could have had this shutdown some time ago.
--
Paul Hovnanian ***@hovnanian.com
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Have gnu, will travel.
Tegger
2010-01-28 19:56:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by john
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five
North American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350
#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
It beats the system we used when I was at Boeing. All the PHBs visited
Japanese manufacturers to learn about lean manufacturing, continuous
quality improvement, etc. And the only idea they brought back was the
moving assembly line. Unlike Toyota, nothing stops our line. If a part
comes in late, its up to you to chase after the plane and get it bolted on.
And you did this with PASSENGER AIRPLANES???

Remind me never to fly on a Boeing ever again. But then Airbus probably
does the same thing.
--
Tegger
Mike Hunter
2010-01-28 20:12:48 UTC
Permalink
No Airbus's get up in the air OK, THEN they fall down. ;)
Post by Tegger
Post by john
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five
North American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350
#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
It beats the system we used when I was at Boeing. All the PHBs visited
Japanese manufacturers to learn about lean manufacturing, continuous
quality improvement, etc. And the only idea they brought back was the
moving assembly line. Unlike Toyota, nothing stops our line. If a part
comes in late, its up to you to chase after the plane and get it bolted on.
And you did this with PASSENGER AIRPLANES???
Remind me never to fly on a Boeing ever again. But then Airbus probably
does the same thing.
--
Tegger
Hachiroku ハチロク
2010-01-28 16:13:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tegger
Post by john
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350
#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
It beats the system we used when I was at Boeing. All the PHBs visited
Japanese manufacturers to learn about lean manufacturing, continuous
quality improvement, etc. And the only idea they brought back was the
moving assembly line. Unlike Toyota, nothing stops our line. If a part
comes in late, its up to you to chase after the plane and get it bolted on.
And you did this with PASSENGER AIRPLANES???
They did this with THESE!!!!

Loading Image...
Post by Tegger
Remind me never to fly on a Boeing ever again. But then Airbus probably
does the same thing.
dbu''
2010-01-28 22:03:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tegger
Post by john
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five
North American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350
#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
It beats the system we used when I was at Boeing. All the PHBs visited
Japanese manufacturers to learn about lean manufacturing, continuous
quality improvement, etc. And the only idea they brought back was the
moving assembly line. Unlike Toyota, nothing stops our line. If a part
comes in late, its up to you to chase after the plane and get it bolted on.
And you did this with PASSENGER AIRPLANES???
Remind me never to fly on a Boeing ever again. But then Airbus probably
does the same thing.
I never heard of such nonsense.
--
Paul Hovnanian P.E.
2010-02-02 19:05:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tegger
Post by john
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five
North American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350
#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
Post by Hachiroku ハチロク
Instead of 'slowing down' when an error is realized, Toyota stops
production.
It beats the system we used when I was at Boeing. All the PHBs visited
Japanese manufacturers to learn about lean manufacturing, continuous
quality improvement, etc. And the only idea they brought back was the
moving assembly line. Unlike Toyota, nothing stops our line. If a part
comes in late, its up to you to chase after the plane and get it bolted on.
And you did this with PASSENGER AIRPLANES???
Yep. The saddest part about the whole 'moving line' crap was trying to get
things to line up. When airplanes are built, some parts need to be
adjusted. Think front end alignment, but much more complex.

Now, think about trying to do a front end alignment while your car is slowly
rolling across the garage floor. We could actually see some of the trim
indicators move back and forth slowly as mechanics were trying to zero them
out.
Post by Tegger
Remind me never to fly on a Boeing ever again. But then Airbus probably
does the same thing.
I don't know if Airbus has bought into the moving assembly line BS. They
have enough problems of their own with the damned things siting still on
the shop floor.
--
Paul Hovnanian ***@hovnanian.com
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Have gnu, will travel.
Mike Hunter
2010-01-27 17:07:10 UTC
Permalink
According to Automotive News, at this point Toyota does not have a clue as
to the cause. At first engineers believed it was caused by certain types
of floor mats. That led to a recall and an advisory to dealers to cut off
a part of the bottom of the accelerator, until new shorter ones could be
made available.

Turns out the accelerator petal was NOT the problem and engineers suspected
that it was the linkage itself, because Toyota with cut off accelerator
petals were running away.

However after over a dozen deaths it soon became apparent it was NOT the
linkage either, because vehicles with fly by wire throttle controls were
running away as well.

Most other manufactures have an override that disables the electronic
throttle when the brakes are applied, but Toyota does not. That does not
take into account the fact that manual linkages on older vehicles are also
having the problem.

The fact that both manual and fly by wire systems are going out of control
is perplexing, thus the stop selling order, as engineers scramble for the
cause.

If Toyota dealers can't sell, Toyota must stop manufacturing and importing
vehicles or they will end up in the position they were at the end of 2009
with hundreds of thousands of unsold vehicles still in plant storage lots
and at ports of entry.

When Toyota shut down the Tundra plant for three months, because of its
dismal sales, it still paid the workers at the Texas plant. Toyota had no
comment on whether they would pay it workers around the world during this
massive shut down. Stay tuned!
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
ransley
2010-01-27 22:43:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
According to Automotive News, at this point Toyota does not have a clue as
to the cause.   At first engineers believed it was caused by certain types
of floor mats.   That led to a recall and an advisory to dealers to cut off
a part of the bottom of the accelerator, until new shorter ones could be
made available.
Turns out the accelerator petal was NOT the problem and engineers suspected
that it was the linkage itself, because Toyota with cut off accelerator
petals were running away.
However after over a dozen deaths it soon became apparent it was NOT the
linkage either, because vehicles with fly by wire throttle controls were
running away as well.
Most other manufactures have an override that disables the electronic
throttle when the brakes are applied, but Toyota does not.    That does not
take into account the fact that manual linkages on older vehicles are also
having the problem.
The fact that both manual and fly by wire systems are going out of control
is perplexing, thus the stop selling order, as engineers scramble for the
cause.
If Toyota dealers can't sell, Toyota must stop manufacturing and importing
vehicles or they will end up in the position they were at the end of 2009
with hundreds of thousands of unsold vehicles still in plant storage lots
and at ports of entry.
When Toyota shut down the Tundra plant for three months, because of its
dismal sales, it still paid the workers at the Texas plant.   Toyota had no
comment on whether they would pay it workers around the world during this
massive shut down.   Stay tuned!
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=3...- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Once working on my 91, I made by accident it go full thottle by
itself, the cable did not go back in fast enough after reving at the
top of the motor and it bent kind of creating a bind, I pulled the
cable and it released, so there is truth to all this, although I
suspect this excuse is the #1 everybody uses to be deemed compitant
when its actualy driver negligence is #1 in accidents
Sir F. A. Rien
2010-01-28 18:02:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
Turns out the accelerator petal was NOT the problem and engineers suspected
that it was the linkage itself, because Toyota with cut off accelerator
petals were running away.
1960's "Flower Power" car ???
jr92
2010-01-29 04:38:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mike Hunter
According to Automotive News, at this point Toyota does not have a clue as
to the cause.   At first engineers believed it was caused by certain types
of floor mats.   That led to a recall and an advisory to dealers to cut off
a part of the bottom of the accelerator, until new shorter ones could be
made available.
Turns out the accelerator petal was NOT the problem and engineers suspected
that it was the linkage itself, because Toyota with cut off accelerator
petals were running away.
However after over a dozen deaths it soon became apparent it was NOT the
linkage either, because vehicles with fly by wire throttle controls were
running away as well.
Most other manufactures have an override that disables the electronic
throttle when the brakes are applied, but Toyota does not.    That does not
take into account the fact that manual linkages on older vehicles are also
having the problem.
The fact that both manual and fly by wire systems are going out of control
is perplexing, thus the stop selling order, as engineers scramble for the
cause.
If Toyota dealers can't sell, Toyota must stop manufacturing and importing
vehicles or they will end up in the position they were at the end of 2009
with hundreds of thousands of unsold vehicles still in plant storage lots
and at ports of entry.
When Toyota shut down the Tundra plant for three months, because of its
dismal sales, it still paid the workers at the Texas plant.   Toyota had no
comment on whether they would pay it workers around the world during this
massive shut down.   Stay tuned!
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=3...- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
But, at least Toyota is making progress. They have finally admitted to
having a problem.

Just that they don't know what is causing it.

Now, it is coming out, that Toyota was aware of this as far back as
2004, but are just now getting around to doing something about it.

Toyota is known for taking care of it's problems.

I guess sometimes if just takes a while to get around to it.
GIga
2010-01-28 03:21:21 UTC
Permalink
Just curious - what the hell does this have to do with Lexus? My brothers
have the same parents that I do, but I don't think their problems reflect on
me...

GIga
Post by john
"Toyota Motor Corp. said today it would halt production at five North
American plants and order dealers to stop selling eight models
recalled last week over concerns with sticking accelerator pedals."
http://apps.detnews.com/apps/blogs/danielhowesblog/index.php?blogid=350#ixzz0dmQAmB7B
ben91932
2010-01-28 16:41:16 UTC
Permalink
Just curious - what the hell does this have to do with Lexus?  My brothers
have the same parents that I do, but I don't think their problems reflect on
me...
Toyota makes Lexus.
Many Lexi are gussied up Toyota's.
HTH,
Ben
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