t****4 发帖数: 7500 | 1 你的测油stick顶端是不是被有色笔给mark了。 我的被mrak了,当时就奇怪, 但没在
意, 无意中看到有人说这是给dealer mechanic看的,有mark的就多加机油让你不易发
现burn oil | j********e 发帖数: 486 | | p*******m 发帖数: 20761 | | n**x 发帖数: 1898 | 4 显然不可能。
引擎活塞快要磨坏的车子也烧机油。
【在 j********e 的大作中提到】 : 老夫认为,烧机油的发动机是长寿的发动机。
| r***i 发帖数: 9780 | 5 有mark的就多加机油让你不易发现burn oil
丰田真是小聪明啊,方方面面坑爹还不让你发现 | f*******s 发帖数: 1100 | 6 造谣什么全家?
【在 r***i 的大作中提到】 : 有mark的就多加机油让你不易发现burn oil : 丰田真是小聪明啊,方方面面坑爹还不让你发现
| r***i 发帖数: 9780 | 7 lol
这你得问lz
话说看了丰田怎么收买事故车掩盖事故,我相信lz说的有一腚道理
看看丰田是怎么收买事故车辆,然后掩盖事实的
Toyota bought both vehicles back from their owners -- who had brought them
in complaining about sudden acceleration -- and both owners say Toyota urged
them not to discuss the incidents. The two cases could undercut Toyota's
claims that every case of sudden acceleration can be attributed to driver
error, faulty floor mats or sticky gas pedals.
Norma Deck told ABC News that she experienced two instances of sudden
unintended acceleration with her 2009 Toyota Corolla and brought the car
into the Penske Toyota dealership in Round Rock, Texas. According to the
filing, a Toyota internal document says a Toyota "technician" took Deck's
car out on an inspection drive.
The document states, according to the filing, that after proceeding from a
stoplight, the "tech[nician] started to lightly accelerate" and after
travelling "20-30 feet the vehicle exhibited a slight hesitation and then
began to accelerate on its own." Engine speed "was estimated to have gone
from 1500 rpm to 5500 rpm at the time of the occurrence," according to the
filing.
When contacted by ABC News, Deck said the dealership told her that they were
able to replicate sudden acceleration in the Corolla. She said Toyota
subsequently bought her Corolla back from her, but said she couldn't divulge
more details because Toyota required her to sign both a confidentiality
agreement about the sale and an agreement not to sue Toyota.
In Milpitas, California, the owner of a 2009 Toyota Tacoma brought his truck
into the Piercey Toyota dealership after complaining that the vehicle
accelerated without explanation. According to the court filing, another
Toyota internal document states that in July of 2009 a dealership service
manager took the vehicle on an inspection drive on a nearby freeway.
"As there was no traffic in front of them, the Service Manager removed his
foot from the accelerator [and]moved it completely away from the pedal area,
" the document states, according to the filing, and "[t]he vehicle continued
to accelerate at what felt like [an estimated] 70% throttle input with no
pedal contact from the driver [and] within 300 feet of the initial
acceleration, the vehicle had reached 95 MPH."
The document states, according to the filing, that the floor mats were
securely in place at the time of the incident and no fault codes were
generated by the onboard computer and "[a]s the Service Manager who
experienced the condition above is considered to be trustworthy and reliable
, the vehicle will be repurchased for further investigation."
When reached by ABC News, the owner of the Tacoma confirmed that Toyota had
bought the Tacoma back from him and said the dealer informed him that they
were able to replicate sudden acceleration in the vehicle. The driver, who
asked not to be named, told ABC News that while Toyota did not ask him to
sign a confidentiality agreement they urged him not to talk about the case.
According to California's vehicle Lemon Law, owners cannot be required to
sign confidentiality agreements over vehicles with possible defects.
"The deeper we dig into the facts that surround Toyota, the more damning the
evidence that Toyota was aware of the issue, and failed to act responsibly,
" said Steve Berman, co-lead counsel for plaintiffs in the class action suit
. "Toyota's been publicly blaming drivers, floor mats and pedals for
acceleration defects while quietly removing defective vehicles from the
market."
According to plaintiff's lawyers, who say they have investigated hundreds of
complaints of sudden acceleration in Toyotas, the Corolla and the Tacoma
are the only cases they are aware of where Toyota has re-purchased vehicles
after an alleged case of sudden acceleration.
When asked about the cases by ABC News, Toyota said that it is not unusual
for the company to repurchase vehicles "as part of our commitment to
investigate acceleration concerns." According to Toyota spokesperson Brian
Lyons, owners are not required to sign confidentiality agreements when a
vehicle is bought back, but "they enter into them voluntarily as part of a
mutual settlement agreement."
Lyons confirmed that Toyota had repurchased the Tacoma and Corolla in
question, and said that Toyota engineers have been "driving and evaluating"
the vehicles "thousands of miles and no problems have been found" and "we
continue to drive these vehicles even today." "As well as these vehicles, [
since April Toyota] has evaluated approximately 4,200 vehicles in North
America. Toyota has not found a single case in which the vehicle's
electronic throttle control system would lead to unintended acceleration,"
said Lyons.
Toyota said that it had informed the NHTSA about the cases through the
company's "Field Technical Report process." However, Olivia Alair, a
spokesperson for the Department of Transportation said an investigation
revealed that Toyota did not report the incidents to NHTSA at the time of
the occurrences. Instead, the memos detailing the cases were among hundreds
of thousands of other documents that were submitted to NHTSA earlier this
year after the agency initiated a probe into the sudden acceleration issue
in February. According to Alair, NHTSA is "currently in discussions with
Toyota about these incidents."
【在 f*******s 的大作中提到】 : 造谣什么全家?
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