Toyota recalls 300,000+ RAV4s and Highlanders

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Originally Posted By: OVERK1LL


Very different than the way Ford/GM/Chrysler are run (and subsequently treated). But again, different culture.


Forgotten the Ford Pinto have you - and how the execs knew all about the safety defect with the fuel tank location even as the cars were going boom in rear-end accidents, then calculated the cost of the recall to fix them versus the possible losses in lawsuits, and arrived at the decision it was cheaper to leave them as they were, and did exactly that.

This was criminal on the part of the then executives at Ford, and even though the management has changed hands several times since, that example is enough to completely torpedo your "different culture" argument, and overturns the "couldn't happen with US companies" rhetoric completely, since that is one example and it long predates the UA issue.

My take (as a lifelong, import exclusive buyer and current Toyota owner) on the "kittens and rainbows" stuff: there is a kernel of truth to that, but to understand why people are "blindly loyal to Toyota etc" (as one poster put it), there is no blindness involved. To the contrary - or is everyone's memory so short they all forget how the arrival on North American shores of cheaper, but still well built, imports was greeted by the US automakers?

Initially with disdain and indifference as the arrogant management of the times assumed that having had their monopoly on the NA auto market for so long, they were somehow entitled to it in perpetuity, with imports being dismissed completely as no threat to their hold on the market in NA.

Then when it turned out they got that wrong, as people bought imports in increasing numbers in preference to what Detroit was turning out, what did they do? Did they step down from their lofty perches to try and understand what was happening, so they could return the "import traitors" back to the fold? Nope, not at all. Instead they took their arrogance to the airwaves with commercials having Orwell-like tones, attacking imports as a "foreign invasion," a threat to US jobs, and more or less accusing buyers of them as being traitors to the country.

Well done Detroit: that smear campaign not only did nothing to turn the tide of people flocking to imports, it also alienated many of them completely from ever looking back.

To say nothing of the "cheap import" tag they also laid with, not in a less expensive alternative sense, but in the derogatory (and increasingly totally false) inferior quality sense. That may have scared a few people away, but still market share continued to be lost as they continued to sell in increasing numbers.

Finally, they eventually addressed it head on by introducing their own smaller, less expensive product to compete directly. Too bad they'd apparently drank the same Kool-aid they'd tried unsuccessfully with the "cheap" campaign, and what they put out to compete just reeked of it. It appeared to be little more than a bone to toss those who wanted what the less expensive imports were offering, but were still on the fence because of the propaganda Detroit had spent years (and millions of bucks) filling the airwaves with.

Whereas the imports were *the* premier models coming out of Japan, and the product reflected that, the Big 3 offered the consumer as an alternative something that seemed to ooze resentment at its own existence. The automakers made little secret of the fact that these were not the cars *they* wanted to build - and forgetting in the process, and thereby sowing the seeds for the hard times to come, that they had their role reversed: there's was not to push on the public what they wanted to make, but to try and understand what it was the public really wanted and match that preference to the best of their ability.

The rest truly is history; but one would do better in understanding the mindset of the import buyer (particularly if they're going to make sweeping generalizations about them and imply they are mindless sheep and the like) if they took into account that chapter of history.

FWIW I grew up during the transition period so I was just old enough to recall (with fondness) the muscle car heyday, but too young to experience it; old enough to see the energy crisis of the 1970s in real time and how OPEC was able to nearly bring our economies to its knees overnight (and the huge gas lineups that accompanied it), but not yet old enough to drive yet.

And my first car (which was a hand me down) was also my first and only American car, and it just happened to be one of the cheap alternatives Detroit was building at the time (1984 model whose manufacturer I'll spare naming), and which oozed the cheapness and how much of an afterthought its design and construction was to its manufacturer. It had some miles on it when I acquired it (about 100k of them), but not enough to justify the many trips to and from the dealer for warranty service during the period it spent under warranty (before I got it, but being a hand me down I was well acquainted with its history), the 3rd engine it was on, the way it wheezed anytime it approached the mildest grade (and forget making highway speed if the highway was uphill), and constant timing adjustments to keep it from stalling whenever it stopped at a light or stop sign.

My eyes were really opened when the 5 year older VW Rabbit I replaced it with (and which had at least double the mileage already when I bought it) still ran like a top, needed nothing other than a fan belt, water pump, and battery over the two years I owned it, and was an all around hassle free - and fun to drive - car that also had some personality and class (which the 1984 domestic was completely devoid of in both areas from the day my parents bought it new).

So even though I can't speak for every import owner (most of which - unlike me - have probably bought many domestics and imports alike in their lifetimes), I can explain the reasoning behind the fact that every time I've shopped, domestic has become my own afterthought to be considered only if I can't find or afford the import(s) that have been my top picks when entering the used car market. So far, there have been enough of them out there to pick from that I've never made it to the afterthought stage.

And in fairness to domestics, it does seem true that today things are very different in both markets and its much harder to make brand generalizations than it used to be, and harder still to assume any given import is superior to its domestic counterpart. That said, its still very telling that the phrase "cheap import" is long gone from the lexicon, and that any discussion on import vs domestic begins by first recognizing that the US is finally catching up (or caught up) to the Japanese in terms of quality and reliability - and not the other way around.

-Spyder
 
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Originally Posted By: Spyder7

Forgotten the Ford Pinto have you - and how the execs knew all about the safety defect with the fuel tank location even as the cars were going boom in rear-end accidents, then calculated the cost of the recall to fix them versus the possible losses in lawsuits, and arrived at the decision it was cheaper to leave them as they were, and did exactly that.



The history of the "Pinto incident"

Quote:
Fuel tank controversy

To achieve the production time scale set by Iacocca, the car had to be designed and produced in 25 months rather than the then-usual 43 months for a new car line. Although front-end testing had been completed in line with safety certification of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, rear-end collision testing was not undertaken until after launch, although Ford engineers knew that testing for rear-end impact was a standard safety procedure.
After launch, rear end testing by Head of Testing Harley Copp's team proved there was a problem from the bolts attaching the rear bumper to the body, and those protruding from the differential, which would in an accident above 20 miles per hour (32 km/h) penetrate the gas tank. Copp issued an internal memo suggesting rectification measures.
Before final sign-off of the 1972 Pinto, in April 1971 Harold MacDonald, Ford Vice President of Car Engineering, chaired a product review meeting around a report from Ford engineers. The recommendation suggested deferring from 1974 to 1976 the incorporation into all Ford cars of either a shock absorbent "flak suit" to protect the fuel tank at a cost of $4 per car, or a nylon bladder within the tank at a cost of $5.25 to $8 per car. Agreeing that the decision would allow Ford to realize a savings of $10.9 million, MacDonald signed-off the reports recommendation, and hence left the Pinto exposed to rear end collision vulnerabilities.
Controversy followed the Pinto after 1977 allegations that the Pinto's structural design allowed its fuel tank filler neck to break off[7] and the fuel tank to be punctured in a rear-end collision,[7] resulting in deadly fires.
[edit]Allegations and lawsuits
Critics alleged that the vehicle's lack of reinforcing structure between the rear panel and the tank meant the tank would be pushed forward and punctured by the protruding bolts of the differential[15] — making the car less safe than its contemporaries.
According to a 1977 Mother Jones article, Ford allegedly was aware of the design flaw, refused to pay for a redesign, and decided it would be cheaper to pay off possible lawsuits for resulting deaths. The magazine obtained a cost-benefit analysis that it said Ford had used to compare the cost of an $11 repair against the monetary value of a human life—what became known as the Ford Pinto Memo.[13][16][17]
An example of a Pinto rear-end accident that led to a lawsuit was the 1972 accident that killed Lilly Gray and severely burned 13-year old Richard Grimshaw. The accident resulted in the court case Grimshaw v. Ford Motor Co.,[18] in which the California Court of Appeal for the Fourth Appellate District upheld compensatory damages of $2.5 million and punitive damages of $3.5 million against Ford, partially because Ford had been aware of the design defects before production but had decided against changing the design.
[edit]Recall
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) pressured Ford to recall the Pinto, motivated by public outcry and pressure from groups such as Ralph Nader's Center for Auto Safety. Initially, the NHTSA did not feel there was sufficient evidence to demand a recall due to incidents of fire. The 27 deaths attributed to Pinto fires is the same number of deaths attributed to a transmission problem in the Pinto, which resulted in 180 total deaths in all Ford vehicles, and in 1974 the NHTSA ruled that the Pinto had no "recallable" problem.[19]
In 1978, Ford initiated a recall providing a plastic protective shield to be dealer-installed between the fuel tank and the differential bolts, another to deflect contact with the right-rear shock absorber, and a new fuel-tank filler neck that extended deeper into the tank and was more resistant to breaking off in a rear-end collision.


Not quite how you've depicted it. Not that I'd expect somebody representing the "Import Crowd" to depict it correctly anyways.

Just to be clear here:

I am NOT defending what took place regarding the Pinto. However, it VERY quickly came to light that there were issues. Am I saying they were dealt with correctly? No, I'm not. But the public was definitely AWARE of the issues.

Could/would Ford do the same thing today? A quick look at the HUGE cruise control switch recall should be a clear indication that no, they couldn't, and wouldn't.

But Toyota DID get away with lies and obfuscation for quite a while and when people were pointing out that things were not quite right, the fanboys were standing in the corner with their fingers in their ears going "lalalalalalala". Rainbows and kittens.
 
Originally Posted By: OVERK1LL

Not quite how you've depicted it. Not that I'd expect somebody representing the "Import Crowd" to depict it correctly anyways.


You're right: my cliff notes (and from memory) summary leaves out many of the details you've provided which - to me - only serve to reinforce the historical argument I made. Particularly the "after thought" part I stated US companies paid to the low end - design and build it as cheaply and quickly as possible - part of the market that was to compete with imports (the Pinto being a fine example in so many ways).

Quote:

Just to be clear here:

I am NOT defending what took place regarding the Pinto. However, it VERY quickly came to light that there were issues. Am I saying they were dealt with correctly? No, I'm not. But the public was definitely AWARE of the issues.

Could/would Ford do the same thing today? A quick look at the HUGE cruise control switch recall should be a clear indication that no, they couldn't, and wouldn't.


I like how you begin by stating you're not defending Ford's actions with the Pinto, before going on to do just that.

Quote:

But Toyota DID get away with lies and obfuscation for quite a while and when people were pointing out that things were not quite right, the fanboys were standing in the corner with their fingers in their ears going "lalalalalalala". Rainbows and kittens.


As did Ford with Pinto. You can toss out all the "fanboy," and "rainbows and kittens" comments you want, but the inherent complexity of the UA problem coupled with even Toyota's own problems in nailing down the cause, shows only that - unlike the Ford case - we have no evidence Toyota knew about it before hand, and nothing at all to suggest they could have fixed the problem (and saved lives in the process) for $9 bucks a car, but decided the extra $9 was more important than the lives of those lost in the Pinto fatalities that arose as a direct - one-to-one causation - cost of that decision.

In any case, in time I - as a Toyota owner, present and likely future as well - really hope that as time passes more info will come to light on the UA issue, but for now consider it not only corrected, but too surrounded by anti-Toyota hyperbole to put much of anything into it until that day comes.

And in dismissing completely what I described as my own experience and perception from being a product of the "cheap import" generation, who after owning only one domestic went import exclusive and never looked back, as "import fanboyism" you seem to either have failed to read the entire post, or else the comprehension factor is completely missing.

There is no "fanboy" here. "Fanboy" implies blind faith to one brand that is based on nothing tangible, when, to the contrary, I spelled out very clearly the tangible reasons behind why I have never bought domestic.

And it also implies that I am repeat buyer of a particular import brand, when that isn't the case either (this Toyota in my sig is in fact my first). The import brands I have bought (or leased) over the years include German, Japanese, and Korean - all of which were as different from each other as they were from their domestic counterparts.

-Spyder
 
Originally Posted By: Spyder7

You're right: my cliff notes (and from memory) summary leaves out many of the details you've provided which - to me - only serve to reinforce the historical argument I made. Particularly the "after thought" part I stated US companies paid to the low end - design and build it as cheaply and quickly as possible - part of the market that was to compete with imports (the Pinto being a fine example in so many ways).


Not surprisingly, I don't see it that way at all.

Quote:

I like how you begin by stating you're not defending Ford's actions with the Pinto, before going on to do just that.


I did? Please show me how.

Quote:

As did Ford with Pinto. You can toss out all the "fanboy," and "rainbows and kittens" comments you want, but the inherent complexity of the UA problem coupled with even Toyota's own problems in nailing down the cause, shows only that - unlike the Ford case - we have no evidence Toyota knew about it before hand, and nothing at all to suggest they could have fixed the problem (and saved lives in the process) for $9 bucks a car, but decided the extra $9 was more important than the lives of those lost in the Pinto fatalities that arose as a direct - one-to-one causation - cost of that decision.


Strange:

Quote:

Claims by Toyota in internal documents that it saved money by obtaining a limited recall from regulators in 2007 will also create problems for the automaker's president when he testifies before U.S. lawmakers this week.

Toyota, in an internal presentation in July 2009 at its Washington office, said it saved $100 million or more by negotiating an “equipment recall” of floor mats involving 55,000 Toyota Camry and Lexus ES350 vehicles in September 2007.

The savings are listed under the title, “Wins for Toyota — Safety Group.” The document cites millions of dollars in other savings by delaying safety regulations, avoiding defect investigations and slowing down other industry requirements.


I remember the above being discussed on this very forum when the UA stuff was the "hot" topic of the day.

http://www.wheels.ca/Industry News/article/784624

BTW, please don't feel I'm singling you out here, I'm not. Nor would I toss you in with the "fanboys" I made reference to. But you are the only one who has responded so far to my comments, so that would be why we are having this back-and-forth here
grin.gif
 
Originally Posted By: Spyder7


As did Ford with Pinto.....we have no evidence Toyota knew about it before hand, and nothing at all to suggest they could have fixed the problem (and saved lives in the process)....



One lie after another.

First off, Ford did not lie and run from the truth, it was their very own internal documents and testing that did them in. They took their lumps in the form of huge cash losses and the lost long held trust they had to earn back from a weary market.

Now as to the second lie. It is unbelievable that you accuse others of having faulty memories of a situation fourty years ago, yet you seem to have such a poor grasp of very recent history.

With regard to the quote above, maybe you with your superior intelligence and memory, you could refresh us all on why Toyota was given three record fines by the NHTSA in the past two years? IIRC, and of course, I defer to your superior memory of these things, that the NHTSA levied those fines in large part because they found Toyota had known about the issues long before they were reported to the NHTSA.

In Europe, the recalls were done almost a year before they started here. In the case of the steering rod recalls, they started in Japan almost a year before Toyota finally admitted to the NHTSA that the recall would be required here.


Toyota NHTSA fines

"Secretary Ray LaHood today announced that Toyota has agreed to pay the additional civil penalties as the result of two separate investigations into the automaker's handling of auto recalls. It has already paid $16 million for a violation earlier this year. All involved not telling the Feds about safety problems it had discovered as required by law.

Grand total in fines so far: $48.8 million.
 
Originally Posted By: OVERK1LL

Quote:

I like how you begin by stating you're not defending Ford's actions with the Pinto, before going on to do just that.


I did? Please show me how.


In the way you summarized the incident while the facts you posted say otherwise. For instance, you said "it VERY [emphasis yours] quickly came to light that there were issues.... [and] the public was definitely AWARE [emphasis again yours] of the issues".

That was in your summary of the more lengthy info you provided, yet it seems to me to be at odds with that very info. It certainly isn't consistent with the following (from your own quoted Pinto info):

1. "rear-end collision testing was not undertaken until after launch, although Ford engineers knew that testing for rear-end impact was a standard safety procedure." Skipping a standard (and critical) safety test before launch serves to illuminate the public on an issue Ford isn't even yet aware of, having skipped the necessary testing prior to offering it to this same public?

2. "After launch, rear end testing by Head of Testing Harley Copp's team proved there was a problem from the bolts attaching the rear bumper to the body, and those protruding from the differential, which would in an accident above 20 miles per hour (32 km/h) penetrate the gas tank. Copp issued an internal memo suggesting rectification measures." This internal memo illuminates the public how?

3. "Before final sign-off of the 1972 Pinto, in April 1971 Harold MacDonald, Ford Vice President of Car Engineering, chaired a product review meeting around a report from Ford engineers. The recommendation suggested deferring from 1974 to 1976 the incorporation into all Ford cars of either a shock absorbent "flak suit" to protect the fuel tank at a cost of $4 per car, or a nylon bladder within the tank at a cost of $5.25 to $8 per car. Agreeing that the decision would allow Ford to realize a savings of $10.9 million, MacDonald signed-off the reports recommendation, and hence left the Pinto exposed to rear end collision vulnerabilities." Ford's VP of Engineering is aware of the issue as early as April of '71, yet to save (at the most by their own estimates) $8/car decides to rectify the problem almost 3 years before the '74 model will debut, decides instead to postpone the fix until 1976. That is a 5 year gap between when he was aware of the issue, had concrete solutions in front of him to address them as well as their total (and inconsequential costs). Not only does that show Ford's total disinterest "in bringing the issue to light," it demonstrates very clearly how they chose to sit on their hands and do absolutely nothing. Nothing to inform the public of the problem, and nothing to address it (unless you consider a decision to fix it in 5 years time being somehow proactive and responsible).

4. "Controversy followed the Pinto after 1977 allegations that the Pinto's structural design allowed its fuel tank filler neck to break off[7] and the fuel tank to be punctured in a rear-end collision,[7] resulting in deadly fires." We are at the 6 year mark in the time line between the first post-launch internal memo spelling out the problem, the 1971 meeting where the VP of engineering decided to do nothing about it on the '74-'76 model years, and this - again from your info - is still an ongoing thing (with the first mention of controversy, and allegations), and this is Ford "very quickly" bringing the issue to light and making the public aware of it?

Come on, there is no way you can seriously call a SIX YEAR span between launch and discovery of the issue as early as 1971, to finally "controversy and allegations" in 1977, the public being "VERY aware" of the issues early on, as you stated. Six years, with Ford knowingly introducing a new - and uncorrected - model every year in between doesn't read to me like an informed public being aware of the issue. Or is your contention that the public was VERY aware of it the whole time, while somehow Ford continues producing and selling uncorrected models the entire 6 year span involved to this informed public?

Do you honestly think that for SIX YEARS the public was aware of the problem and continued buying uncorrected Pintos anyway?

The punchline: not until 1978 (SEVEN YEARS after Ford knew of the issue) did they finally issue a safety recall.

Yeah right. Nothing to see there, no skeletons at all in US automaker's closets. What a beaut of an example of an informed public on the issue and how Ford finally owned up to it - 7 years after they first knew about it internally.

-Spyder
 
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Quote:
To the contrary - or is everyone's memory so short they all forget how the arrival on North American shores of cheaper, but still well built, imports was greeted by the US automakers?

Initially with disdain and indifference as the arrogant management of the times assumed that having had their monopoly on the NA auto market for so long, they were somehow entitled to it in perpetuity, with imports being dismissed completely as no threat to their hold on the market in NA.

Then when it turned out they got that wrong, as people bought imports in increasing numbers in preference to what Detroit was turning out, what did they do? Did they step down from their lofty perches to try and understand what was happening, so they could return the "import traitors" back to the fold? Nope, not at all. Instead they took their arrogance to the airwaves with commercials having Orwell-like tones, attacking imports as a "foreign invasion," a threat to US jobs, and more or less accusing buyers of them as being traitors to the country.

Well done Detroit: that smear campaign not only did nothing to turn the tide of people flocking to imports, it also alienated many of them completely from ever looking back.



I'm not sure what you are talking about? Detroit came out with smaller cars to the market in 1960 to compete with European imports because that's what Detroit thought buyers wanted, but they really didn't. Detroit was aware of imports since the late 50's. Most of the imports at the time honestly ruined their own image with reliability and substance issues.

As far as Detroit "having a monopoly of the NA market", I mean come on, Detroit basically invented the automobile and it's not like Japan doesn't still have a monopoly of their own market.

I'm not sure when the Big 3 were "smearing" imports. If anything imports were never popular until the media started smearing Domestics. Don't be surprised if there weren't money to be made and pay offs to promote imports in the media, an anti-UAW agenda etc. A lot money and jobs were lost to imports. Some things you say I agree with, and some things seem kind of pulled out of thin air.
 
Originally Posted By: LS2JSTS
Originally Posted By: Spyder7


As did Ford with Pinto.....we have no evidence Toyota knew about it before hand, and nothing at all to suggest they could have fixed the problem (and saved lives in the process)....



One lie after another.

First off, Ford did not lie and run from the truth, it was their very own internal documents and testing that did them in. They took their lumps in the form of huge cash losses and the lost long held trust they had to earn back from a weary market.


LOL Ford didn't lie and run from the truth? What do you call the 7 year span between when they first became aware of the problem (which surfaced when they chose to postpone the usual rear-end collision testing that's done pre-launch, until after they launched it) and when they finally issued the 1978 safety recall to actually do something about it?

Seven years of producing models, each of which they knew had the potential to explode in a rear end collision, and not until 1978 do they recall it.

The facts themselves, as posted by overk1ll, show they knew exactly what the problem is as soon as they did the necessary safety test (which was their first end-run around public safety and their responsibilities there when they decided to launch it before it had even completed its safety testing), had several possible fixes as early as 1971 that cost up to a meager $8/car, and did nothing.

Not until 1978, when the public and the NHTSA began pressuring them, did Ford finally issue a safety recall to address the issue.

And really - their own "internal testing and documents that did them?" By that you mean the standard rear-end collision testing and the internal report based on the results? Hmm. Interesting way to spin that.

And as for the "taking their lumps" and "loss of public trust" that followed, yeah sure they did - 7 years after they knew about the problem and sat on it with their mouths shut, no fix issued, and nothing done about it until external pressure forced them to address it with the 1978 safety recall.

You bet they lost the public's trust, and yes they did pay a price for. Deservedly so.

As is Toyota with its own UA issue, except unlike the Pinto issue, its not yet a closed chapter of history. Its still a live controversy, still being investigated, and we don't yet know the full price Toyota will pay for it, but certainly a price will be paid.

And if you look at the decline in sales numbers and lost revenue since the UA issue surfaced, its apparent (at least to some of us) that Toyota has already begun to pay a price for it. We can't know the total price tag yet because its not yet entirely over and relegated to history.

-Spyder
 
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Originally Posted By: mechanicx

I'm not sure what you are talking about? Detroit came out with smaller cars to the market in 1960 to compete with European imports because that's what Detroit thought buyers wanted, but they really didn't. Detroit was aware of imports since the late 50's. Most of the imports at the time honestly ruined their own image with reliability and substance issues.

I'm not sure when the Big 3 were "smearing" imports. If anything imports were never popular until the media started smearing Domestics. Don't be surprised if there weren't money to be made and pay offs to promote imports in the media, an anti-UAW agenda etc. A lot money and jobs were lost to imports. Some things you say I agree with, and some things seem kind of pulled out of thin air.


They didn't want the first Toyota's (the Land Cruiser and Coronet) introduced in the 50s either. The Land Cruiser simply because it was an SUV before its time (and market existed), and the Corona because it was too underpowered for the tastes of the US car buyer (so 3 years after its debut in 1958 in the US it was discontinued in favor of the Corona that replaced it, and the Corolla a few years later).

As to the rest, see "The End of Detroit: How the Big Three Lost Their Grip on the American Market" by Maynard. Some extracts from a review I found of it that go to (at least some) your questions:

Quote:


...imports from Korea, Japan and Germany systematically have eaten away at the market share of U.S. car brands... these companies consistently offered consumers higher quality, cheaper prices or more dramatic styling and performance.

...

... the Big Three continued to produce inconsistent, poor quality cars that didn't meet consumers' changing needs, even as a growing list of competitors upped the ante. Worse yet, the Big Three blamed everyone but themselves for the problems besetting them. And finally they suffered from a major case of hubris, believing that their consumers would keep coming back if they added enough macho sizzle to cars.


http://www.bookreporter.com/reviews/0385507704.asp

Written in 2003, the predictions made in the book - to date - have also been pretty on the money.

-Spyder
 
Originally Posted By: Spyder7
Originally Posted By: LS2JSTS
Originally Posted By: Spyder7


As did Ford with Pinto.....we have no evidence Toyota knew about it before hand, and nothing at all to suggest they could have fixed the problem (and saved lives in the process)....



One lie after another.

First off, Ford did not lie and run from the truth, it was their very own internal documents and testing that did them in. They took their lumps in the form of huge cash losses and the lost long held trust they had to earn back from a weary market.


LOL Ford didn't lie and run from the truth? What do you call the 7 year span between when they first became aware of the problem (which surfaced when they chose to postpone the usual rear-end collision testing that's done pre-launch, until after they launched it) and when they finally issued the 1978 safety recall to actually do something about it?

Seven years of producing models, each of which they knew had the potential to explode in a rear end collision, and not until 1978 do they recall it.

The facts themselves, as posted by overk1ll, show they knew exactly what the problem is as soon as they did the necessary safety test (which was their first end-run around public safety and their responsibilities there when they decided to launch it before it had even completed its safety testing), had several possible fixes as early as 1971 that cost up to a meager $8/car, and did nothing.

Not until 1978, when the public and the NHTSA began pressuring them, did Ford finally issue a safety recall to address the issue.

And really - their own "internal testing and documents that did them?" By that you mean the standard rear-end collision testing and the internal report based on the results? Hmm. Interesting way to spin that.

And as for the "taking their lumps" and "loss of public trust" that followed, yeah sure they did - 7 years after they knew about the problem and sat on it with their mouths shut, no fix issued, and nothing done about it until external pressure forced them to address it with the 1978 safety recall.

You bet they lost the public's trust, and yes they did pay a price for. Deservedly so.

As is Toyota with its own UA issue, except unlike the Pinto issue, its not yet a closed chapter of history. Its still a live controversy, still being investigated, and we don't yet know the full price Toyota will pay for it, but certainly a price will be paid.

And if you look at the decline in sales numbers and lost revenue since the UA issue surfaced, its apparent (at least to some of us) that Toyota has already begun to pay a price for it. We can't know the total price tag yet because its not yet entirely over and relegated to history.

-Spyder


Your grasp of the facts and the federal tests that were required at the time the Pinto was developed is seriously flawed. May I suggest the wiki link is not the best source of valid information. Look into the NHTSA and the 300 series of crash test standards and when they were adopted to gain some real insight here.

FWIW...I think the gentleman from Rutgers has a better grip on the facts surrounding the Pinto case than you(or wiki) ever will. Read his account, at the peril of your own twisted half truths.

The Ford Pinto Case Rutgers Law Review
 
I saw a great bumper sticker 1 year ago that completely summed it up. I don't care what anyone has to chime in about % vehicle being made here or there blah blah plants in the US, etc. This is truly whats happening. Bring back made in USA campaign and I will happily spend more money to purchase US made items.

"Out of a job yet?"
"Keep buying foreign"
 
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