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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" V5 o" Q0 }4 l
Washington (AP) -- The president of Toyota's U.S.
& Z! S4 d- I8 R8 x( g6 Koperations acknowledged to skeptical lawmakers on Tuesday that9 ~9 t6 }$ u* {% @& l$ z  h
the company's recalls of millions of its cars may "not totally"* z4 G) n4 \9 ?! b
solve the problem of sudden and dangerous acceleration.
" c: D- s1 O. k( D! N  h! ["We are vigilant and we continue to look for potential
& I; i2 T( ]' R9 o$ lcauses," Toyota's James Lentz told a congressional panel.
1 A, Q% |" G' v- l8 WHowever, he repeated his company's position that unexpected
9 l: @  T* G: e5 M" Facceleration in some of the company's most popular cars and
/ {6 P" L" D2 J4 e' v, rtrucks was caused by one of two problems -- misplaced floor
% A9 G& A$ {4 k. Tmats and sticking accelerator pedals.! j9 z5 D% m; m9 X# K" y0 D) W
He insisted electronic systems connected to the gas pedal
5 z: I% Q2 P) Z5 \9 land fuel line did not contribute to the problem, drawing sharp- t) X7 z$ N- S: r- d9 S( C* d
criticism from lawmakers who said such a possibility should be
4 \9 L7 g1 r7 q# w6 gfurther explored -- and from a tearful woman driver who could
0 [. O6 v, p( H8 n8 T9 {) Pnot stop her runaway Lexus.+ h/ o9 w! L: N4 w# W3 ?( K9 w" b  _- E
"Shame on you, Toyota," Rhonda Smith, of Sevierville,, B3 B/ t3 F2 E
Tenn., said at a congressional hearing. Then she added a second$ s3 r1 ]$ @# ?
"shame on you" directed at federal highway safety regulators.
: V! j$ _+ Q: k& N& S- M* b! ZTexas Republican Rep. Joe Barton cautioned his colleagues
! X" T$ r9 J8 Q9 I6 mearly in the hearing against conducting a "witch hunt" and said2 r4 l! U' Y) b1 K3 L4 x
"We don't want to just assume automatically that Toyota has8 Y8 i5 j  l9 p  n: j5 `; \1 s5 z& O
done something wrong and has tried to cover it up." But midway+ p; `0 I5 \; j/ y% P
through Lentz's testimony, Barton said of Toyota's
6 t" n3 S3 Z+ _+ Zinvestigation of the problems: "In my opinion, it's a sham."# x! P/ ^, ], `1 [! o
Lentz said the company had not completely ruled out an9 U3 K9 S9 P& C4 A; Z" P* I) F
electronics malfunction and was still investigating causes of
# S9 ]6 c: }1 R9 w" `the sudden acceleration. Still, "We have not found a
4 C$ O- B8 P+ Smalfunction" in the electronics of any of the cars at issue, he
6 p% Q# X# z9 Csaid.
6 h: W$ ]7 ~( v# c& D- E- P0 K' EAs to Smith's harrowing story, "I'm embarrassed for what
9 F% ~" ~7 F$ _$ D  yhappened," Lentz said. "I want her and her husband to feel safe
# ?' F' ]) q& y; X8 U" M2 Fabout driving our products," Lentz said.. L9 ]& i5 \5 u1 l; q
Three congressional panels are investigating Toyota's( r# ^; G7 b2 c
problems, which affect a huge number of Americans. Toyota has
( s% ~4 D& a( s$ E) ]; C7 F4 wrecalled some 8.5 million vehicles worldwide -- more than 62 c- H0 n5 |' O- t- [' z; u, @
million in the United States -- since last fall because of
( Y9 s3 V; {! P0 W8 A( v4 Bunintended acceleration problems in multiple models and braking
9 g8 z6 _+ s1 g7 z) l- C( q; Gissues in the Prius hybrid. It is also investigating steering* a" U9 ^, o& R# ~
concerns in Corollas. People with Toyotas have complained of; ~  K( a7 ~! v( |
their vehicles speeding out of control despite efforts to slow
% H. [. w7 L2 X: g; V6 _down, sometimes resulting in deadly crashes. The government has
  i4 e* B  Z9 J1 N0 g" P. ~# X- Ureceived complaints of 34 deaths linked to sudden acceleration
6 S- f3 U; `+ U0 T  p: `6 ^; n0 m3 ]of Toyota vehicles since 2000.
8 z2 W+ w* W; p# E( hLentz, who choked up while discussing the death of his own
! g& k+ V* ]5 T9 b, Q4 \brother more than 20 years ago in a car accident, said he
- l4 U* z" n$ d: ~2 f9 E9 f$ y7 u! _understood the pain.
1 j, V4 D/ X) m- _"I know what those families go through," he said.6 L3 g& q: _* D( ?% _
Lentz has said in the past that he was confident Toyota's/ J) l, L9 \+ \
fixes on the recalled vehicles would correct the problems.* L- Y$ V# }  m& s. Z3 \( L/ R$ f2 F
But when pressed by Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman
$ `. [1 `/ Y: F+ x7 d4 aHenry Waxman, D-Calif., on whether the two recalls Toyota put7 b8 K: M( a/ w+ J% C
in place to deal with the issue would completely solve it,
8 b& O; r2 C* \+ `. n. r/ |Lentz replied: "Not totally."8 {( E3 c- N* J) _& w; o* E
Still, he said chances of unintended accelerations were
# C' _, ]7 N- D- Z. X"very, very slim" once the recall was complete. Lentz also said* W0 u8 c  r, n- J; b6 Q5 p/ c! L  f
Toyota was putting in new brakes that can override the gas, |1 j: ]8 y% c1 i# b2 E. u: Q
pedal on almost all of its new vehicles and a majority of its
' P" q" t  s; T+ A2 L( }vehicles already on the road.
3 |+ R% q7 ?* F  aMeanwhile, Toyota president Akio Toyoda, who will testify4 P( J1 z) ~9 V- n; N0 _
before a separate panel on Wednesday, said he took "full
6 W2 C2 C. t% Bresponsibility" for the uncertainty felt by Toyota owners and3 e# Y! Z6 O, I+ D  U. K: m
offered his condolences to a San Diego, Calif., family who were4 G) H% K# b7 F0 f7 g; I, }! |: ^
killed in late August, reigniting interest in the problems.
. Z- M% U7 C& D"I will do everything in my power to ensure that such a
$ B+ F' ]; M+ {2 e* o4 @# e7 vtragedy never happens again," Toyoda said in prepared testimony
4 g0 K' l  B/ S3 jfor Wednesday's hearing to the House Government Oversight# _( }) V8 s3 L& s. v5 P
Committee. "My name is on every car. You have my personal7 h) C2 I: Z0 n1 C! n9 y" Y1 j( J
commitment that Toyota will work vigorously and unceasingly to2 `( r3 |2 ^" U8 K
restore the trust of our customers."
; x/ R- ~. m! k$ Q4 _. cLawmakers heard a brief, but riveting, deion from2 d5 Q3 {/ t% G
Smith, the Tennessee woman whose Toyota-made Lexus suddenly, x0 h; H3 }7 s/ Z
zoomed to 100 miles per hour as she tried to get it to stop --: ?& B4 _+ w% L' J& g, E
shifting to neutral, trying to throw the car into reverse and" L" y. p8 a% f4 ]* A( v; ]
hitting the emergency brake. Finally, her car slowed enough$ k# a2 ~* x+ \3 I3 l4 j8 l
that she was able to pull it off the road onto the median and  x5 w  F% f/ }8 C9 h, m" t
turn off the engine.% r: U1 K& ~7 L3 b8 `, G
Fighting back tears, she described her nightmare ride of' `9 ~4 H; l7 u
October 2006, calling it "a near death experience."2 `/ K2 R& c2 p: c
"After six miles, God intervened" and slowed the car, she
; r: B, V# V( O( h' Q; q! {said. She added that it took a long time for Toyota to respond# |$ N. a" O" o  v  B; _
to her complaints.
- [" m& u5 q' t' b* E  y0 GIn an often contentious full day of testimony, lawmakers; W' t  u0 S3 R1 t3 Z
returned again and again to the question of whether electronic
# m3 t8 e0 G8 m2 g1 w) `& s  Umalfunctions may have contributed to the speeding cars.. b0 _1 h8 g: |  q
"We are confident that no problems exist with the electric
& J, u, T  k0 v$ Ythrottle control system in our vehicles," Lentz said. He cited1 J  d8 M1 [5 w' n$ ^( b5 u
"fail-safe mechanisms" in the cars that were designed to shut
; {! j5 T; m5 x, Goff or reduce engine power "in the event of a system failure."& H! M* C) H' F. n$ B
Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood told the panel in0 y* O$ C; X% K5 ?- _7 ~" O
prepared testimony that possible electronics problems were
3 }! p" r4 T7 M& ~  v, y( a7 H2 vbeing looked into by his agency. He said the company's recalls* j( D. T# c2 c4 R$ Q
were important steps but "we don't maintain that they answer- `# V$ ^% q6 |; A+ X7 J. N! B
every question."9 s! w) ^7 N7 w' [, i3 W! r
Toyota hired a consulting firm to analyze whether
+ y2 W! {9 i" o2 g8 F  melectronic problems could cause unintended acceleration. The6 y) h! h" ^. h2 @1 _
firm, Exponent Inc., found no link between the two. But, w" B3 L/ V* _. N, M8 D0 [6 ^
committee investigators said the testing studied only a small; l2 H, h$ S, I9 Z! c" N. @) N
number of vehicles
6 k) n9 t. g0 D/ XTracking down an electrical problem can be far more" M. M( a! p7 b! h6 S* T
difficult, expensive and time-consuming than finding a
( h7 W0 f( ^/ }0 s% S! ~) ^mechanical problem. Electrical problems can have more than one
& @' K) r- }% Y2 Nsource, and they can come from inside or outside the car.
, `; x3 O0 @1 y+ J( `: T  \Mechanical problems often leave clues such as physical damage,
* W  E, T+ X; t5 A/ i8 _( Pwhere electronic troubles can be hidden in software or leave no% D# i- Y2 U  g2 ]
trace at all.
* d( t0 u; k+ s0 m- XHouse investigators who reviewed Toyota's customer call
+ R6 w9 k2 k+ A5 r+ ~( @* U; F8 Idatabase found that 70 percent of the complaints of sudden$ @" e4 @5 X4 w% y  p, r6 I3 h
acceleration were for vehicles that are not subject to the7 S0 }1 S' O0 M8 ?; t
recalls over floor mats or sticky pedals.
, x9 |1 u1 _4 Q7 S4 P( X6 _4 b4 M* SRep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., chairman of the subcommittee,1 P8 _& P7 H8 d8 b( u) q- _; R3 y
said Toyota "misled the American public by saying that they and
4 p; S. ?; V. w% [" qother independent sources had thoroughly analyzed the
& N0 [$ B: h4 P5 ~: @: velectronics systems and eliminated electronics as a possible, i: o2 ?  l1 N8 h0 D
cause of sudden unintended acceleration when, in fact, the only+ h( \6 K1 |; v$ _9 r
such review was a flawed study conducted by a company retained
5 h6 C2 s4 |. q; J2 C6 Pby Toyota's lawyers."
% w/ u4 E+ _" BLentz apologized anew for the company's slow handling of
/ i5 Y/ n/ h! A  J2 Hproblems. "We have not lived up to the high standards our
6 A# `% i4 g  l/ ?customers and the public have come to expect from Toyota," he# L: m) B" g/ ]
said.
% O8 z8 [9 @! p( o1 F. P2 Z5 Z4 l. a"Put simply, it has taken us too long to come to grips with: U0 r) w- b$ V" ^- G
a rare but serious set of safety issues, despite all of our7 G6 C/ P$ B4 v# m
good faith efforts," said Lentz, president and chief operating( {7 x/ {/ p% M7 I  Y5 `) o' O
officer of Toyota Motor Sales USA. Inc.
: v% n0 t- i& Q# l8 G( g& w% p( zSeparately, among hundreds of Toyota dealers lobbying
2 ?+ B5 {7 v7 \members of Congress Tuesday, there seemed to be widespread
/ D' s0 ?' w# s8 l: n5 {rancor toward a federal government they view as picking on the- n# w& t0 T+ [9 w* \; @
automaker, at least in part because of the government's7 b# m( [/ \' n
investment of billions of dollars in General Motors and4 Q" m. V" q  i1 Q; b6 D7 x7 ?
Chrysler." T4 [' c) s, H2 v. Q
"That's hard for me as a citizen to understand why my tax
" d$ N" g" M: O: |4 j  Fdollars are going in that direction," Paul Atkinson, a8 T* @1 @5 o: W, _# z1 [
Houston-area Toyota dealer, said at a news conference that also4 K0 d) h' R! I
served as a pep rally for the visiting dealers. "To compete
3 s2 n9 l' d! y' S  C! k- Uwith the government as an individual entrepreneur is pretty
( G7 R$ Z$ ^1 _tough."
  K5 C( d; Y, y% Z5 R4 e9 T$ z---
5 M% G' a6 g2 P1 u  l! QAssociated Press writers Alan Fram, Stephen Manning and Tom
# A. e( @$ {  u& V2 Y$ s5 R3 ~Raum in Washington and Tom Krisher in Detroit contributed to  u% L2 Q1 T+ l$ y  U0 ]* W( [
this story.
% u; S& }* x; C8 t$ ]) N, t
  {5 r$ o2 O/ v5 z$ I) U( Y-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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