Toyota finds no flaw with safety electronicsPublished on Tue, Mar 09, 2010 at 11:04 | Source : Reuters Updated at Tue, Mar 09, 2010 at 17:10
Toyota Motor Corp said it had found no flaw with its throttle controls as it seeks to dismiss an external study critical of its electronic safety systems. The conclusions, announced at a news conference on Monday, marked an attempt by the automaker to reassure consumers it has safety issues under control. But in developments that underscored the continuing pressure on Unintended acceleration in The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has also said it is looking into more recent complaints from drivers who say they suffered acceleration problems even after their vehicles were fixed in the recent recall effort. Those complaints have been seen by some as further evidence that But "We're confident in our electronic throttle control systems," Michels said. Gilbert told a congressional panel in late February that he had found a way to simulate a flaw in But Chris Gerdes, a professor of mechanical engineering at Stanford and director of the university's Center for Automotive Research, said Gilbert had essentially "rewired" "Fundamentally, you cannot rewire a circuit and expect it to behave as designed," Gerdes told reporters. Gilbert said he planned to visit Exponent's test facilities next week and expected to complete a review of the information it had presented in the next few weeks. "I am pleased that further examination of these safety and acceleration issues is taking place, and I look forward to participating in this process," he said in an email to Reuters. Judge orders Gilbert has received some funding from the Safety Research and Strategies, a safety advocacy that has in turn taken funding from trial lawyers with cases pending against For its part, Separately on Monday, a Guadalope Alberto died when her 2005 Camry surged out of control. Her family is suing Also on Monday, Rep. Edolphus Towns, a New York Democrat who chairs the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, asked The October 2006 letter, addressed to then-president Katsuaki Watanabe from a splinter union called the All Toyota Labor Union in the wake of a recall scandal in Among the causes of the quality slippage, the group blamed the fall in the number of experienced staff in favour of contract workers, the longer working hours and the aggressive pursuit of cost reductions. The letter appeared on the 20-member union's website.
PREVIOUS STORY Trending NewsBusiness News
Tags: Toyota Motor Corp |
NewsVideos
Interviews
![]() May 31 2012, 17:09 | Source: CNBC-TV18 ![]() May 31 2012, 14:55 | Source: CNBC-TV18 ![]() Subscribe to Moneycontrol Newsletters |
|||||||