Government Motors

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
Ford didn't take a dime. They just showed a profit.

After years of being considered the highest quality, Toyota suddenly has two vehicles on the shit list. Our government even says don't drive the Toyota's.

GM is still losing money.

It makes you wonder, conflict of interest?

Now you know why government needs to stay out of business.
 
Ford didn't take a dime at the same time as GM...but they sure as hell took a few bucks a coupla months earlier when they received nearly $6B from the same GVT to help retool factories and make more fuel efficient vehicles. They also have a recall on their cars..but it's hush hush..not too loud.
Ford Motor Co., announced Friday that it is recalling 3.8 million passenger cars, trucks, sport utility vehicles and vans — including 177,000 in Canada, Mexico and Europe — to address concerns about a cruise control switch that had led to previous recalls based on reports of fires.

Ford said the recall covers more than a dozen vehicle models built from 1992-2007.
October 2009

Not sure how you get to your conclusion tho'
 
Ford didn't take a dime at the same time as GM...but they sure as hell took a few bucks a coupla months earlier when they received nearly $6B from the same GVT to help retool factories and make more fuel efficient vehicles. They also have a recall on their cars..but it's hush hush..not too loud. October 2009

Not sure how you get to your conclusion tho'

Old news. The fix for my truck took less than 5 minutes, cost absolutely nothing, and they did the job in the parking lot and didn't even pull it into the bay. How hard is it to plug in a pigtail wire between two connectors?

You can do the [whine] Ford did it tooooooo![/whine] but that doesn't make your information damning or current.

It also doesn't say much about your honesty as the recall was never "hush hush".

From your own story:

In January, 2005, the Dearborn, Mich.-based automaker began a recall of nearly six million vehicles because of engine fires linked to the cruise control systems in trucks, SUVs and vans.
 
Shhhhhh. This is hush hush, and you didn't hear it from me ...

By the by. Is this "hush hush? Oh, the scandal!

Note that this is a story from today February 4.

SOURCE

Ford to Fix Brake Problem on Milan, Fusion Hybrids

Thursday, February 04, 2010

DETROIT — Ford Motor Co. plans to fix 17,600 Mercury Milan and Ford Fusion gas-electric hybrids because of a software problem that can give drivers the impression that the brakes have failed.

The automaker says the problem occurs in transition between two braking systems and at no time are drivers without brakes.

The decision to fix the 2010 model cars came after a test driver for Consumer Reports magazine experienced the problem as he was driving a Fusion Hybrid.

Ford spokesman Said Deep says braking power seems to drop away as the car makes a transition from regenerative brakes to the conventional system. The Ford hybrids have regenerative brakes, which capture energy from braking to help recharge the battery, in addition to a conventional system that stops the car using hydraulic pressure.

Deep says Ford will notify the car owners to bring their cars in for a software fix. He said there is no safety problem with the cars. The automaker called the repairs a "customer satisfaction program" and said it was not a full-fledged recall. Deep said Ford reported the problems to a U.S. safety agency, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. All hush hush, ya know -- j

The move comes on the same day that NHTSA began an evaluation of braking problems on the 2010 Toyota Prius hybrid. With the Prius, antilock brakes can fail momentarily while the car transitions between its gasoline and electric motors.

Ford told dealers about a fix on Thursday. They already had the software to repair it in case it came up, Deep said.

He said Ford did not notify all the owners before Consumer Reports found the problem because the number of problems was small.

"We're taking this action proactively to kind of address some of the customer problems we've seen," he said.

The software fix changes the pedal feel so it doesn't drop, he said.

The cars were built before Oct. 17, 2009. For models built after that date, Ford fixed the software at the factory to change the feel of the pedal, Deep said.

Jeff Bartlett, Consumer Reports' deputy editor for online autos, said one of the magazine's most experienced test drivers braked while approaching a curve in a Fusion hybrid last month, and the brake pedal dropped about an inch.

"They didn't react the way he expected," Bartlett said. "He perceived it to be a brake failure of some kind."

The driver coasted to a stop and shut off the engine, and when he restarted it, the brakes worked normally, Bartlett said.

Consumer Reports notified Ford, which responded quickly to evaluate the problem, Bartlett said.
 
Great... now, why is Toyota being slammed for fixing their cars' problems in the same way..through a recall? Why GVT intervention by the USA?

Could it be the protectionist head popping back into view?
 
Great... now, why is Toyota being slammed for fixing their cars' problems in the same way..through a recall? Why GVT intervention by the USA?

Could it be the protectionist head popping back into view?

why indeed ;)
protectionist? no

eliminating the competition. That's why.
They can't just come out and say "don't drive...."ur um, ...nevermind.
 
Great... now, why is Toyota being slammed for fixing their cars' problems in the same way..through a recall? Why GVT intervention by the USA?

Could it be the protectionist head popping back into view?

Toyota has shown an exemplary level of ethics and they deserve none of what is being heaped upon them. They exist, as of this writing, as probably the most ethical auto company on planet Earth.
 
Toyota getting back at ABC for negative coverage. Brian Ross is a drama whore.

SOURCE

Toyota Dealers Pull ABC TV Ads; Anger Over 'Excessive Stories'

'Punishment for Reporting' as Southeast Dealers Shift Commercial Money to Non-ABC Stations

By JOSEPH RHEE and MARK SCHONE
Feb. 8, 2010

Toyota dealers in five southeast states have pulled their commercials off ABC TV local affiliates, complaining about the coverage of Toyota safety problems by ABC News and its chief investigative correspondent Brian Ross.

The ad agency representing the 173 dealers told ABC affiliates last week that the shift was due to "excessive stories on the Toyota issues." The dealers shifted their commercial time buys to non-ABC stations in the same markets, "as punishment for the reporting," according to an ABC station manager.

ABC News and Ross began reporting on the problem of "runaway Toyotas" last November in a series of stories that preceded the large recalls ordered by the company, and apologies for quality shortcomings as well as misstatements about the extent of the defects. Toyota is now expected to add the 2010 Prius to its list of recalled vehicles.
 
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