Toyota to test all SUVs for rollover control

Posted April 15, 2010 at 12:36 p.m.

Associated Press | Toyota is testing all its sport-utility
vehicles to reassure buyers of their safety after Consumer Reports
warned
a large Lexus SUV is susceptible to rolling over.

The expanded testing covers the entire lineup of Toyota and Lexus SUVs,
including popular models such as the RAV4, 4Runner and Highlander, said
Toyota spokesman Brian Lyons. The automaker will be testing the
vehicles’ stability control to replicate the Consumer Reports’ test that
uncovered the problem, he said.


Toyota is also suspending production of the Lexus SUV — the GX460 — built in Tahara, Japan, for 12 days starting Friday. Toyota not decided whether to recall the vehicle, a hefty seven-seat SUV sold mainly in North America but also in the Middle East, Russia and some other nations.

The move reflects a new urgency at Toyota Motor Corp. to deal with safety problems. The automaker in recent months has been plagued by recalls and accusations that it responded too slowly to safety lapses.

“I do think Toyota is responding very quickly,” said Rebecca Lindland, automotive analyst at consulting firm IHS Global Insight. “I think the difference is that this situation has been made very public.”

This week, Consumer Reports said the rear of the GX460 slides out too far in sharp turns designed to test the vehicle’s handling. That puts the back end at risk of hitting a curb and rolling over. Toyota says it does not know what’s causing the problem but was working to address it so the influential magazine, which many shoppers rely on to choose new cars, would retest the vehicle and give it a satisfactory rating.

A small-volume SUV that launched in late December, Toyota has sold just 4,787 GX460s in the U.S. this year, or about 10 percent of sales for Lexus and just 1 percent Toyota’s overall U.S. sales.

Still, Toyota ordered dealers to stop selling the model in North America Tuesday within hours of the Consumer Reports warning. On Thursday, Toyota said it would expand the sales halt to all markets. The model is not sold in Japan.

The problem arose in a standard test on a Consumer Reporters track in which the driver approaches a sharp turn unusually fast, then releases the accelerator pedal to evaluate the vehicle’s response.

The maneuver mimics what an alarmed driver might do after exiting a highway ramp too fast, Consumer Reports says. In normal circumstances, the electronic stability control, a computerized system that helps prevent skidding, should keep the car under control. But it took too long to kick in with the GX460, causing it to slide almost sideways into the turn.

Consumer Reports said the sliding problem did not occur in the same test of the Toyota 4Runner, which shares underpinnings with the Lexus SUV.

Toyota has recalled more than 8 million vehicles worldwide since October, mostly due to flaws in the automaker’s pedal design. The recalls have mostly been confined to Toyota-branded vehicles, and the Lexus GX460 is not among them.

Consumer Reports, widely read by many car buyers for its reputation for objectivity, has been critical of Toyota recently. In January, the magazine pulled its “recommended” rating on eight recalled models.

Toyota also faces a $16.4 million fine from the U.S. Transportation Department, which says the automaker was too slow to issue its recalls. Toyota has until April 19 to decide whether to contest the penalty.

Toyota shares lost 0.8 percent in Tokyo Thursday, closing at 3,710 yen ($40). U.S.-traded shares fell 21 cents to $80.12 in afternoon trading.

 

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