Originally Posted By: PT1
Originally Posted By: Dualie
Originally Posted By: PT1
Originally Posted By: GMBoy
Notice above GM person doesn't flame Toyota...now if it was a GM PT1 and his croonies would be all over it!
Notice the CEO from Toyota publically apologized to the family.If it were a GM they would deny it and hide behind some lawyers skirt. The Ford Firestone issue killed almost 800 people before they even admitted it was an issue. Remember how Ralph Nader got his start?
I beg to differ stupid drivers killed 800 people. the tires were only the trigger to very poor decision making.
The Firestone tires were of very marginal quality and never tested by Ford to be validated on the Explorer. The Goodyear tire that Ford rejected for $.25 per tire would not have failed under those circumstances. There is literally thousands of pages of independent testing regarding the subject. The owners of the vehicles in most cases ran them underinflated but proper vehicle testing in desert conditions would have failed the validation. But at that time Nassar was cutting expenses as he wanted to make Ford "like GE". He admired Jack Welch's method of managing General Electric and was envious of how GE stock was skyrocketing in the 1990's. So he tried to take a highly capital intensive engineering driven auto company and run it the same way. Didn't work and problems like the Explorer tire issue slipped between the cracks. IIRC there were over 100 people killed in Explorers before Ford QA even knew about it.
Toyota, Honda, and GM used Firestones of that era with no issues. Heck, Toyota and GM used the Wilderness AT on the 4Runner and the Sierra/Silverados with few issues. Honda used the FR680 and FR690 as OEM on the Civic and the Affinity on the Odyssey during the whole Ford/Firestone debacle with few problems.
DBW is nothing new - the aerospace industry has been using it for a while as fly-by-wire, but the system isn't completely foolproof. It all falls down to who programs it. An example is Airbus and Boeing - Airbus's FBW strategy is computer first, pilot last and the plane's computers will not relinquish control to the pilot unless there is a grave situtation where it is too late. Boeing believes that the pilot has the last say over the plane - their FBW systems allow for more human interaction.