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丰田承认换踏板不一定能全部解决加速问题

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发表于 2010-2-24 15:48 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
老杨团队,追求完美;客户至上,服务到位!
By LARRY MARGASAK and KEN THOMAS
3 v/ o' K" [+ R' Z. @6 U7 L: TWashington (AP) -- The president of Toyota's U.S.! U( F% L  t) P
operations acknowledged to skeptical lawmakers on Tuesday that
: t6 [, s" @/ j/ W: N) a& Hthe company's recalls of millions of its cars may "not totally"$ C' ?& b! l" F; E+ Z
solve the problem of sudden and dangerous acceleration.* Z+ u/ n: D1 F
"We are vigilant and we continue to look for potential) T( i* a: u* q; p7 m+ g
causes," Toyota's James Lentz told a congressional panel.0 C  _5 f; ^( q+ N, n# k6 A
However, he repeated his company's position that unexpected  ?  O7 z  j2 j1 c
acceleration in some of the company's most popular cars and
$ K1 r  S  ?4 O" X) C; rtrucks was caused by one of two problems -- misplaced floor  q2 s" f" a4 q1 ^2 p& a
mats and sticking accelerator pedals.
. Z6 l9 }+ j% J- X8 v8 G  JHe insisted electronic systems connected to the gas pedal
7 J0 a/ f& T5 {0 F4 ]and fuel line did not contribute to the problem, drawing sharp
+ l) j; _* c0 h0 V$ i- L" xcriticism from lawmakers who said such a possibility should be* T# z8 x6 Y. s: s, z, \  s& J
further explored -- and from a tearful woman driver who could. Z/ J- S! c' _+ a3 Y- X. q: q
not stop her runaway Lexus.( n" @* T8 s2 M& M+ e1 {
"Shame on you, Toyota," Rhonda Smith, of Sevierville,7 d/ W6 s2 o6 v" L5 \* ^- V- m6 y1 k1 b  l
Tenn., said at a congressional hearing. Then she added a second1 ]8 v2 S# Y! V, [8 V4 F' G
"shame on you" directed at federal highway safety regulators.! E7 G# G6 a" r9 m6 ~
Texas Republican Rep. Joe Barton cautioned his colleagues
) X& I9 _, Q) Z: Tearly in the hearing against conducting a "witch hunt" and said: g0 L! A, @% V
"We don't want to just assume automatically that Toyota has+ S; ?( S+ h0 }: |
done something wrong and has tried to cover it up." But midway9 F: M3 C# g8 W  T3 y. b
through Lentz's testimony, Barton said of Toyota's. @- v5 ]: j- I2 T/ G! i# J
investigation of the problems: "In my opinion, it's a sham."$ P& \; D2 ^5 p5 C3 |
Lentz said the company had not completely ruled out an
6 T% D- F& N' \% |  N. yelectronics malfunction and was still investigating causes of
0 `: y9 J6 d" S0 u" U" mthe sudden acceleration. Still, "We have not found a
( R7 a1 d5 E2 K5 _malfunction" in the electronics of any of the cars at issue, he
7 i9 b# n; C. @% k4 Wsaid.. p7 i, s& K( |# `7 \$ W
As to Smith's harrowing story, "I'm embarrassed for what
2 ^: B  U6 D' [happened," Lentz said. "I want her and her husband to feel safe& [4 F7 P, P8 `# P$ X" i1 g0 ?1 O
about driving our products," Lentz said.( \9 B: ]7 C$ o. s& k" Y  A
Three congressional panels are investigating Toyota's
. x( q1 R$ y$ s) a3 Yproblems, which affect a huge number of Americans. Toyota has
- v! b) B; _. X4 ?- d9 R, drecalled some 8.5 million vehicles worldwide -- more than 6' b% l4 s4 r( r& F; P6 J7 v
million in the United States -- since last fall because of
. P1 S; j3 d& c2 {unintended acceleration problems in multiple models and braking
: M' k6 a  d; r5 l& Sissues in the Prius hybrid. It is also investigating steering
/ j) W2 K% x- v. y7 k9 P" Uconcerns in Corollas. People with Toyotas have complained of" u5 K( f9 E4 q
their vehicles speeding out of control despite efforts to slow
. R4 D4 G5 F+ r2 Qdown, sometimes resulting in deadly crashes. The government has# W' O2 ]6 r. X' j9 H$ N+ u
received complaints of 34 deaths linked to sudden acceleration
, B( n1 E$ H& R' V) Qof Toyota vehicles since 2000.
& ^" g) W8 v/ c' E5 A6 uLentz, who choked up while discussing the death of his own
1 c8 x  l5 B6 S7 u- ibrother more than 20 years ago in a car accident, said he
4 T* N$ s- `7 ~understood the pain.4 c0 P7 H3 @% j, D/ U
"I know what those families go through," he said.! |5 |  B9 q% }8 j/ ]0 n
Lentz has said in the past that he was confident Toyota's; {/ A$ j, `- a! W- A7 i, S0 O
fixes on the recalled vehicles would correct the problems.8 q, \; {+ Q* X; W$ ^* H, y2 q$ B: b
But when pressed by Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman& L2 _& z/ F/ l3 E
Henry Waxman, D-Calif., on whether the two recalls Toyota put" S/ n- Y1 E+ j( I
in place to deal with the issue would completely solve it,% w) d7 ~) G* q3 D7 T$ [; M! }& H
Lentz replied: "Not totally."
; E; w/ w% ]! n6 N! AStill, he said chances of unintended accelerations were9 G2 D" r/ h. _5 v% i
"very, very slim" once the recall was complete. Lentz also said
7 t* R$ M* ~# N; ^7 GToyota was putting in new brakes that can override the gas+ `: W: u5 @4 R* _, o! H
pedal on almost all of its new vehicles and a majority of its
( h/ p3 U2 F, bvehicles already on the road.
/ L  t( s. e: i/ B1 f4 GMeanwhile, Toyota president Akio Toyoda, who will testify, |. ^! \" u: R6 [% x0 F$ Q5 ?# x
before a separate panel on Wednesday, said he took "full' g& z1 Z# A, J. s. J7 X
responsibility" for the uncertainty felt by Toyota owners and; k$ g% Y8 [8 i1 s
offered his condolences to a San Diego, Calif., family who were
# `- v) F+ L  _# @3 r: Jkilled in late August, reigniting interest in the problems.  F  k2 ]. T1 N% Y! L% |! W- g9 R
"I will do everything in my power to ensure that such a) m/ b4 r% r9 m0 x# G$ z
tragedy never happens again," Toyoda said in prepared testimony$ f/ m- w' Q6 d: X3 m1 `/ L) t
for Wednesday's hearing to the House Government Oversight: [* `2 r. g. b; R! t) |( Q! Y1 c
Committee. "My name is on every car. You have my personal
4 M$ r4 M3 O8 J& V6 q4 J& @5 acommitment that Toyota will work vigorously and unceasingly to/ E. ?) ~% G# q  t4 K  f$ n
restore the trust of our customers."
$ J4 H/ k+ z# d; X# R( h- FLawmakers heard a brief, but riveting, deion from6 L% D3 G5 Z, f7 P. `8 i
Smith, the Tennessee woman whose Toyota-made Lexus suddenly
" M$ m. H8 c- j" vzoomed to 100 miles per hour as she tried to get it to stop --3 [( w/ d9 C2 Y' I2 u  G% s
shifting to neutral, trying to throw the car into reverse and* T; n8 X& w/ T$ m& Q
hitting the emergency brake. Finally, her car slowed enough# v* l: r$ P+ c
that she was able to pull it off the road onto the median and  l* |; u! \% o
turn off the engine.
+ X+ ~; u- Y. y4 f% L. XFighting back tears, she described her nightmare ride of0 A4 Y  ?, {' P5 l9 j
October 2006, calling it "a near death experience."
, r; U( I" a5 X' z  G"After six miles, God intervened" and slowed the car, she7 n3 X' S0 p' W' P8 Q
said. She added that it took a long time for Toyota to respond
6 N+ X5 y$ U8 k9 S1 _& b! k3 oto her complaints.0 x0 l! r6 }! [4 \0 o9 _
In an often contentious full day of testimony, lawmakers
9 z9 g' H2 v' w! q2 X; breturned again and again to the question of whether electronic
" S, T7 P3 G4 V2 P, h7 _. r$ Imalfunctions may have contributed to the speeding cars.
/ i6 M' u7 [+ G1 n/ x9 `9 y+ C"We are confident that no problems exist with the electric4 ?* D& v% q0 n, k
throttle control system in our vehicles," Lentz said. He cited
1 n1 X: J$ \; D$ s# V"fail-safe mechanisms" in the cars that were designed to shut
! r# L0 [+ a6 Hoff or reduce engine power "in the event of a system failure."
; P" T8 ^" @1 x% XTransportation Secretary Ray LaHood told the panel in
: @3 d7 Q* n  S3 j% ~6 f3 t9 zprepared testimony that possible electronics problems were
( d7 L% s2 F( s$ U/ r4 y: |) Dbeing looked into by his agency. He said the company's recalls
9 ?: n# `1 E' ~) qwere important steps but "we don't maintain that they answer- u! h1 z# t+ O5 l3 h' p6 C, x
every question."- F' [& z$ m5 n) T  L3 q, z. D
Toyota hired a consulting firm to analyze whether7 W) b7 [) \' E; x5 O- r6 P
electronic problems could cause unintended acceleration. The8 m  v! a* D' D6 V% M
firm, Exponent Inc., found no link between the two. But1 S2 Q. v8 J' j' W  n" n+ |
committee investigators said the testing studied only a small3 @+ ^# a( b0 A/ ~8 j. J1 i( B
number of vehicles& j, r6 p6 X2 Y  H- o: L6 {, g
Tracking down an electrical problem can be far more5 [' }+ G, x1 _. \
difficult, expensive and time-consuming than finding a4 T) u. S8 d; l& Q( o, a1 a
mechanical problem. Electrical problems can have more than one
6 R; G$ L' t2 v: f0 F0 H* V4 ~source, and they can come from inside or outside the car.5 U; C. d1 [( Q; R( E
Mechanical problems often leave clues such as physical damage,3 \0 j5 f+ E3 A* o
where electronic troubles can be hidden in software or leave no/ D) _/ ^. r) U7 a
trace at all.
: p% o! o4 N1 k3 nHouse investigators who reviewed Toyota's customer call
/ j) W: U) w( G* V- [8 l0 Rdatabase found that 70 percent of the complaints of sudden% o1 e- T4 \- z0 f  D. f) M; T9 }4 z
acceleration were for vehicles that are not subject to the
& F1 O% C; Q9 }* x- D# m5 x, grecalls over floor mats or sticky pedals.
1 Y2 z1 }1 S# S4 K% U5 HRep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., chairman of the subcommittee,
' ^6 l6 e* j, w) q, Qsaid Toyota "misled the American public by saying that they and
- b  F: O; Z) `: I$ m  Sother independent sources had thoroughly analyzed the
% C" W& I& l! k3 m8 Y# b, U/ [( W. Kelectronics systems and eliminated electronics as a possible# {3 B" Y0 P4 V# G" q- o
cause of sudden unintended acceleration when, in fact, the only
7 [) d& v2 ~( C! T2 Y5 \such review was a flawed study conducted by a company retained! M" E4 K6 S  h; a5 @) t# ?! }
by Toyota's lawyers."/ |" _2 g6 b! ?) p$ e: Q
Lentz apologized anew for the company's slow handling of. f: G/ i9 c( [/ c2 U" N7 }- A3 L
problems. "We have not lived up to the high standards our
# P7 r! o. e+ ]customers and the public have come to expect from Toyota," he
1 f: N$ k" Z/ q/ L6 b5 esaid.. N+ Q" g8 _- i5 z
"Put simply, it has taken us too long to come to grips with
7 Z' g$ f; H2 U. v, V1 Ma rare but serious set of safety issues, despite all of our
0 D: c, [  }( T  F1 ?: wgood faith efforts," said Lentz, president and chief operating( g# I4 j8 ~; U9 K) s0 @
officer of Toyota Motor Sales USA. Inc.3 M' \. }. D% E% |
Separately, among hundreds of Toyota dealers lobbying  l, V/ O9 h% }
members of Congress Tuesday, there seemed to be widespread! [8 _1 x2 }* i, Z
rancor toward a federal government they view as picking on the
3 |7 G4 L- d% y. wautomaker, at least in part because of the government's
/ a7 F. Z8 X& l, b5 sinvestment of billions of dollars in General Motors and) {3 E6 r! B& ]1 [4 z' ~* [5 ]
Chrysler.
: R8 V& i' e+ z1 \$ `! Z"That's hard for me as a citizen to understand why my tax# a0 D7 a, v6 z0 A
dollars are going in that direction," Paul Atkinson, a
% I# E/ v6 {! _0 @9 P/ PHouston-area Toyota dealer, said at a news conference that also
- @& u; a) s, F, sserved as a pep rally for the visiting dealers. "To compete
6 ]+ h0 a7 P) }. f1 \/ \0 Rwith the government as an individual entrepreneur is pretty
* e8 f  w+ w+ S; {+ jtough."
/ ^/ o6 w: ^& _! Q3 v5 t---
* \7 v! X5 R/ g" j) l" X, v$ jAssociated Press writers Alan Fram, Stephen Manning and Tom% z' L) O7 ]( U6 U
Raum in Washington and Tom Krisher in Detroit contributed to/ }6 S+ J; x$ j1 X6 S4 l7 l/ T5 G
this story.
3 F# p. y0 C% V) ]% O% \1 s5 M+ i) T
-0- Feb/23/2010 21:04 GMT
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发表于 2010-2-27 22:40 | 显示全部楼层
本来踏板就不是什问题的关键,recall也只不过是对大众的心理治疗罢了
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