Toyota to replace gas pedals for unsatisified owners

Posted March 23, 2010 at 1:41 p.m.

Associated Press | Toyota has told dealers it will provide
replacement accelerator pedals to owners  unsatisfied with their repairs
under the massive recall following dozens of complaints about the fix.

The Japanese automaker said in a memo obtained Tuesday by The Associated
Press that if a customer is unhappy with the feel of the accelerator
after the car is repaired, dealers can provide a replacement pedal free.
Dealers have been inserting a piece of metal into the gas pedal
mechanism to eliminate friction that was causing the pedal problem on
more than 4 million vehicles involved in a January recall.


“A replacement pedal should only be offered to a customer after the reinforcement bar has been installed and the customer has expressed dissatisfaction with the operation and/or feel of the pedal,” Toyota said in a memo to dealers, service manager and parts managers.

The memo, dated February 2010, said the pedal replacement “is based upon specific customer request only. Dealers are not to solicit pedal replacement.” The memo was first reported by The New York Times.

An AP analysis of government data found that more than 100 owners have complained to the government about problems with sudden acceleration after Toyota dealers fixed their vehicles. Toyota has said it is confident in its repairs and has found no evidence of other problems, such as faulty electronics.

Toyota has recalled more than 8 million vehicles globally over sticky pedals and accelerators that can become entrapped in floor mats, tarnishing the company’s safety reputation and leading to government investigations and congressional hearings.

The memo addresses Toyota vehicles that were listed in the January recall, including the 2005-10 Avalon; 2007-10 Camry and Tundra; 2009-10 Corolla, Matrix and RAV4; 2008-10 Sequoia and 2010 Highlander.

“If a customer is not satisfied with the operation and/or the feel of the accelerator pedal after the reinforcement bar has been installed, please assist us by assuring a replacement pedal is provided at no charge to these customers,” the company said in the memo.

Officials with Toyota and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration did not immediately comment.

A group of consumer advocates and engineers who contend Toyota has discounted potential electronic problems in the vehicles planned to hold a news conference Tuesday on the massive recalls. Toyota has said it has found no evidence that electrical issues are behind the recalls.

Kristen Tabar, an electronics general manager with Toyota’s technical center in Ann Arbor, Mich., said in a video clip posted by the company Monday that the automaker has eight labs in Japan that it uses to bombard vehicles with electronic interference.

She said Toyota ensures that “every system in the vehicle operates properly under those conditions.”  

 

One comment:

  1. MarkRG March 23, 2010 at 3:38 pm

    They can ‘bombard’ all the test cars they want. No lab test will ever fully simulate real world conditions. They need to test the cars that HAVE failed instead of a pristine ‘test car’.
    This is still all smoke and mirrors to obscure the real responsibility.