From: john on
The floor mats and sticking pedal accounts for only 30% of the
problems. The true cause of sudden acceleration is still not known so
no real solution is possible. IMO it's the electronics.

"In earlier testimony, David Gilbert, a Southern Illinois University
professor, tells the panel he was able to produce in a lab environment
a sudden-acceleration incident using a Toyota vehicle, in essence by
introducing a short between two circuits.

Gilbert, whose research was sponsored by consumer advocacy firm Safety
Research & Strategies, says it was fairly simple to confuse the Toyota
electronics, but he has so far been unable to introduce a similar
failure in the electronic controls for a Buick Lucerne."

http://wardsauto.com/home/toyota_still_looking_100223/
From: Hachiroku ハチロク on
On Tue, 23 Feb 2010 17:47:06 -0800, john wrote:

>
> The floor mats and sticking pedal accounts for only 30% of the problems.
> The true cause of sudden acceleration is still not known so no real
> solution is possible. IMO it's the electronics.


Near as I can see, you're the only confused thing I can see around here.

IMO, of course.


From: jim beam on
On 02/23/2010 05:47 PM, john wrote:
> The floor mats and sticking pedal accounts for only 30% of the
> problems. The true cause of sudden acceleration is still not known so
> no real solution is possible. IMO it's the electronics.

"in your opinion"? are you a software engineer? are you an electrical
engineer? are you /any/ form of engineer?


>
> "In earlier testimony, David Gilbert, a Southern Illinois University
> professor, tells the panel he was able to produce in a lab environment
> a sudden-acceleration incident using a Toyota vehicle, in essence by
> introducing a short between two circuits.
>
> Gilbert, whose research was sponsored by consumer advocacy firm Safety
> Research& Strategies, says it was fairly simple to confuse the Toyota
> electronics, but he has so far been unable to introduce a similar
> failure in the electronic controls for a Buick Lucerne."
>
> http://wardsauto.com/home/toyota_still_looking_100223/

and we can find "witnesses" that will stand up and allege that their
vehicle's throttle, brakes, transmission and ignition all failed
simultaneously. but not as simultaneously as their credibility.


--
nomina rutrum rutrum
From: JoeSpareBedroom on
"jim beam" <me(a)privacy.net> wrote in message
news:o4SdnZnR94D1KBnWnZ2dnUVZ_j6dnZ2d(a)speakeasy.net...
> On 02/23/2010 05:47 PM, john wrote:
>> The floor mats and sticking pedal accounts for only 30% of the
>> problems. The true cause of sudden acceleration is still not known so
>> no real solution is possible. IMO it's the electronics.
>
> "in your opinion"? are you a software engineer? are you an electrical
> engineer? are you /any/ form of engineer?


He can swap a hard drive while blindfolded, and he knows some geologists.


From: Hachiroku ハチロク on
On Wed, 24 Feb 2010 06:55:23 -0500, JoeSpareBedroom wrote:

> "jim beam" <me(a)privacy.net> wrote in message
> news:o4SdnZnR94D1KBnWnZ2dnUVZ_j6dnZ2d(a)speakeasy.net...
>> On 02/23/2010 05:47 PM, john wrote:
>>> The floor mats and sticking pedal accounts for only 30% of the
>>> problems. The true cause of sudden acceleration is still not known so
>>> no real solution is possible. IMO it's the electronics.
>>
>> "in your opinion"? are you a software engineer? are you an electrical
>> engineer? are you /any/ form of engineer?
>
>
> He can swap a hard drive while blindfolded, and he knows some geologists.

Look again. You're talking about the wrong person.

Gee, you've NEVER been wrong before!!!