Runaway Toyotas

Mar 5, 2009
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Understanding Toyota Sudden Acceleration

Joel S. Hirschhorn

As a materials and manufacturing engineer with decades of experience with failure analysis of manufactured products, and as an owner of a Toyota vehicle, I am saddened by the lack of expertise and insight shared with Congress and the public about the sudden acceleration problem.

When products fail due to a systemic design, materials or manufacturing flaw, large and statistically significant levels of problems emerge fairly rapidly. This is definitely not the case with the Toyota problem. With many millions of Toyota models on which even more millions of miles have been driven, if there had been an inherent materials or manufacturing design defect, then we would have seen untold thousands of cases of sudden acceleration. It literally would have been virtually a daily event happening all over the country in many Toyota models. But, in fact, little more than 1,000 Toyota and Lexus owners have reported since 2001 that their vehicles suddenly accelerated on their own. This is a tiny, minuscule percentage of Toyotas.

This infrequent runaway car problem is not analogous to a serious case of bacterial contamination of a major food product causing many thousands of cases of food poisoning in a relatively short period. It is even more difficult to find the cause of.

Understanding this nature of defects also means that the so-called solutions of replacing floor mats and gas pedals are sheer nonsense. Indeed, it did not surprise me to read today that there have already been cases of sudden acceleration in cars that had received fixes by Toyota. More than 60 Toyota owners have complained to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration about cars already repaired under the two major Toyota recalls, saying they aren't fixed and their throttles can still race out of control.

While recognizing the agony and suffering of sudden acceleration accidents and deaths it is also necessary to appreciate the statistically rare occurrences of this problem. Only by doing so is it possible to understand that the ultimate explanation – and solution – to the sudden acceleration problem will be a non-systemic flaw or defect in a critical component. In other words, either a random defect in a material or some unusual and infrequent deviation in a manufacturing process of some critical component. Only such a situation can logically explain so few sudden acceleration problems in so many millions of cars being operated for many more millions of hours and miles.

In my professional opinion, the likely scenario is a defect in a semiconductor chip used in the electronic control system. A defect that was caused by some infrequent flaw in a raw material or manufacturing process that would not show up in routine quality control testing of raw materials or components. That so many different Toyota models over many years have been found defective signifies the likelihood of a particular problem component made in a specific factory that has been used for quite a while. Moreover, the defect obviously does not ordinarily impair vehicle performance but only manifests itself under some infrequent conditions, as yet undetermined.

Rita Taylor of Fort Worth, Texas experienced runaway acceleration, took her car to a Toyota dealer, and had the floor mats removed. A few months later she had another frightening runaway episode. Ditto for Eric Weiss in California, who also had a second episode months after the first one and after removing the mats. Others who have not died and kept using their Toyotas have also had repeat events. Thus, perfectly normal vehicle performance is possible between runaway events.

Make no mistake, the precise cause of such a sporadic event is incredibly difficult to pin down and even more difficult to remedy. An extremely intense and costly investigation is necessary. It is the classic needle-in-the-haystack problem.

If my thinking is correct, then it is sheer folly to believe that replacing floor mats or gas pedals can solve the sudden acceleration problem. However, there is one aspect to the sudden acceleration problem that also is crystal clear and, in some ways, even more aggravating than the acceleration problem. This is the absence of an override system that absolutely prevents fuel being fed to the engine when brakes are employed while a car is accelerating. It is gratifying that the federal government is seriously considering requiring such an override system in all vehicles. An effective override system might, in the long run, be a faster and more cost-effective solution than chasing-the-defect strategy, especially for retrofitting many millions of vehicles.

Alternatively, finding the cause of the sudden acceleration problem requires a standard failure analysis methodology, namely to obtain absolutely every Toyota vehicle that has experienced sudden acceleration. Then meticulously examine through microscopic and other types of analysis and testing all critical components of the electronic system (called by Toyota the Electronic Throttle Control System with intelligence). Think of it like an autopsy.

This does not appear to have been done. To the contrary, the firm hired by Toyota tested several ordinary vehicles and components. One of the primary authors of the Exponent report said they did not examine any vehicles or components that had the unintended accelerations. This makes no sense whatsoever if the defect is rare and, therefore, its finding that there was nothing wrong was meaningless. Worse, it was a deception and distraction.

[The author has a Ph.D. in Materials Engineering and was formerly a full professor of metallurgical engineering at the University of Wisconsin, Madison and a consultant for many corporations, such as IBM, Texas Instruments, Polaroid, and RayOVac, and has served as an expert witness in many legal proceedings. He was a senior official at the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment and the National Governors Association and is the author of several nonfiction books and hundreds of articles.]
 
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Fly by wire is not a good thing for a consumer auto.
They need a physical throttle linkage.

Perhaps they have a windows operating sytem and if the Thorttle sticky you need to press the windshield wiper, defrost and headlight buttons simultaneously to reboot?
 
Fly by wire cars are dangerous. I prefer a solid link between the accelerator and the throttle device...and between the brake pedal and the brake cylinders. Computer controlled engine speed can easily have a malfunction that can't be controlled by the average driver. There should at least be a kill switch somewhere on the dash. Do away with that stupid steering wheel lock and fix it where a driver can kill the engine and still steer the wheel...even without PS.

We've gone too damn soft and we expect to much convenience in car operations. Go back to roll up windows, manual mirrors and manual door locks. Take the frills off and give me a car that works all the time.
 
Did y'all see the runaway Prius segment on ABC News a few minutes ago?

Wish I could link to the video, but it's not up yet.

From the information given, it seem the new Toyotas don't start with a key like older cars...they use a transponder equipped smart key in conjunction with a start/stop button.

In the segment, pushing the stop button would not stop the engine.

Here is the story from another source:
James Sikes bought his Toyota Prius in 2008 and 53,000 miles later the car was driving fine. But on Monday afternoon, when he accelerated to pass another vehicle on Interstate 8 east of San Diego, the car kept going.

"The gas pedal stuck open all the way," said Sikes, 61, a real estate agent from San Diego.

For 30 miles, Sikes said, he swerved in and out of traffic, narrowly missing a big rig and trying desperately to slow the vehicle down, at one point reaching down with his hand to pull back on the gas pedal. The brakes were useless.​
 
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Link to Smart Key information at Wikipedia:

The advanced key allows the driver to keep the car key in their pocket when unlocking, locking and starting the vehicle. The key is identified via a proximity sensor in the car door and a radio pulse generator in the key housing as soon as the driver is within approximately 1.5 meters (4.92 feet) of the vehicle.

The advanced key system also means that the steering is released and the ignition is activated electronically without inserting the key in the ignition. The driver must have the key with them inside the car before the engine can be started by pressing down on the brake pedal and then either pressing a starter button or twisting an ignition switch, depending on the car model.

 
True Toyota story... The very first new car I ever bought in my life was a Toyota Corolla way back in 1973. Driving it home, as I came through town, an old gomer ran a stop sign and t-boned my brand new car. I could have done more damage to his old Plymouth car by kicking the door panel. His car was hardly even scratched. My brand new Toyota was totalled!!! I owned a Toyota for less than an hour. Have never owned another Toyota since.
 
Did y'all see the runaway Prius segment on ABC News a few minutes ago?

Wish I could link to the video, but it's not up yet.

From the information given, it seem the new Toyotas don't start with a key like older cars...they use a transponder equipped smart key in conjunction with a start/stop button.

In the segment, pushing the stop button would not stop the engine.

Here is the story from another source:
James Sikes bought his Toyota Prius in 2008 and 53,000 miles later the car was driving fine. But on Monday afternoon, when he accelerated to pass another vehicle on Interstate 8 east of San Diego, the car kept going.

"The gas pedal stuck open all the way," said Sikes, 61, a real estate agent from San Diego.

For 30 miles, Sikes said, he swerved in and out of traffic, narrowly missing a big rig and trying desperately to slow the vehicle down, at one point reaching down with his hand to pull back on the gas pedal. The brakes were useless.​
Good thing, too...because if you turned off the ignition you'd lock the steering...how fun would that be at 90+ miles an hour?

Best thing to do is shift it in neutral and keep applying the brakes.
 
True Toyota story... The very first new car I ever bought in my life was a Toyota Corolla way back in 1973. Driving it home, as I came through town, an old gomer ran a stop sign and t-boned my brand new car. I could have done more damage to his old Plymouth car by kicking the door panel. His car was hardly even scratched. My brand new Toyota was totalled!!! I owned a Toyota for less than an hour. Have never owned another Toyota since.


My first car was a used Toyota Corolla that I purchased i 1982. I loved that car - paid cash for it and drove it for 10 years with nary a problem.

I don't like the politicized nature of this situation with Toyota. Something smells rotten in DC.
 
Did y'all see the runaway Prius segment on ABC News a few minutes ago?

Wish I could link to the video, but it's not up yet.

From the information given, it seem the new Toyotas don't start with a key like older cars...they use a transponder equipped smart key in conjunction with a start/stop button.

In the segment, pushing the stop button would not stop the engine.

Here is the story from another source:
James Sikes bought his Toyota Prius in 2008 and 53,000 miles later the car was driving fine. But on Monday afternoon, when he accelerated to pass another vehicle on Interstate 8 east of San Diego, the car kept going.

"The gas pedal stuck open all the way," said Sikes, 61, a real estate agent from San Diego.

For 30 miles, Sikes said, he swerved in and out of traffic, narrowly missing a big rig and trying desperately to slow the vehicle down, at one point reaching down with his hand to pull back on the gas pedal. The brakes were useless.​
Good thing, too...because if you turned off the ignition you'd lock the steering...how fun would that be at 90+ miles an hour?

Best thing to do is shift it in neutral and keep applying the brakes.



Nah...this happened to me not long ago in my old pickup...accelerator pedal got stuck.

If you turn the key back one position to accessory (ACC)...the position you use to run the radio without turning on the dashlights...the engine will stop but you retain the ability to steer and brake.

You will lose power steering and power braking...but you will not run the risk of damaging the engine from over-revving.

The Toyota website says holding the off switch for 3 seconds will do the same thing.



I'm not saying not to but the car in neutral...I'm saying that's not what I did or would do if confronted with that situation again.
 
Did y'all see the runaway Prius segment on ABC News a few minutes ago?

Wish I could link to the video, but it's not up yet.

From the information given, it seem the new Toyotas don't start with a key like older cars...they use a transponder equipped smart key in conjunction with a start/stop button.

In the segment, pushing the stop button would not stop the engine.

Here is the story from another source:
James Sikes bought his Toyota Prius in 2008 and 53,000 miles later the car was driving fine. But on Monday afternoon, when he accelerated to pass another vehicle on Interstate 8 east of San Diego, the car kept going.

"The gas pedal stuck open all the way," said Sikes, 61, a real estate agent from San Diego.

For 30 miles, Sikes said, he swerved in and out of traffic, narrowly missing a big rig and trying desperately to slow the vehicle down, at one point reaching down with his hand to pull back on the gas pedal. The brakes were useless.​

This suggests that the accelerator pedal sticking is not the problem.
 
We've gone too damn soft and we expect to much convenience in car operations. Go back to roll up windows, manual mirrors and manual door locks. Take the frills off and give me a car that works all the time.

Forget about an accelerator.

Just a hole in the floor panel is all I need.

flintstones-car.jpg
 
That is One Chopped Prius.

They don't behave like that in nature.
 
Did y'all see the runaway Prius segment on ABC News a few minutes ago?

Wish I could link to the video, but it's not up yet.

From the information given, it seem the new Toyotas don't start with a key like older cars...they use a transponder equipped smart key in conjunction with a start/stop button.

In the segment, pushing the stop button would not stop the engine.

Here is the story from another source:
James Sikes bought his Toyota Prius in 2008 and 53,000 miles later the car was driving fine. But on Monday afternoon, when he accelerated to pass another vehicle on Interstate 8 east of San Diego, the car kept going.

"The gas pedal stuck open all the way," said Sikes, 61, a real estate agent from San Diego.

For 30 miles, Sikes said, he swerved in and out of traffic, narrowly missing a big rig and trying desperately to slow the vehicle down, at one point reaching down with his hand to pull back on the gas pedal. The brakes were useless.​
Good thing, too...because if you turned off the ignition you'd lock the steering...how fun would that be at 90+ miles an hour?

Best thing to do is shift it in neutral and keep applying the brakes.



Nah...this happened to me not long ago in my old pickup...accelerator pedal got stuck.

If you turn the key back one position to accessory (ACC)...the position you use to run the radio without turning on the dashlights...the engine will stop but you retain the ability to steer and brake.

You will lose power steering and power braking...but you will not run the risk of damaging the engine from over-revving.

The Toyota website says holding the off switch for 3 seconds will do the same thing.



I'm not saying not to but the car in neutral...I'm saying that's not what I did or would do if confronted with that situation again.
Maybe I did something wrong so I'll try it again. But holding down the button for three seconds shut everything off.

And you point about turning the key back one click is good but IMO I'd freak out and shut it off...so neutral would be my best option. If the engine blows up, so what...Toyota is at fault.
 

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