Filed under: Car Buying, Government/Legal, Recalls, Safety, Toyota
Consumer Reports may be ready to offer a vote of confidence in
Toyota, depending on the outcome of the Japanese automaker's current
Congressional Hearings on Toyota Safety here in the United States, says CR Senior Director David Champion.
At the end of January as news was starting to pile up regarding reported cases of unintended acceleration and the subsequent recalls of nine Toyota models (totaling 2.3 million vehicles), CR decided to pull its Recommended rating from the
Toyota Avalon,
Camry,
Corolla,
Highlander,
Matrix (and its twin, the
Pontiac Vibe),
RAV4,
Sequoia and
Tundra.
Says Champion, "We're looking at a daily basis at the recalls. We want to be sure that the recalls are being performed." Assuming that Toyota's efforts to repair faulty gas pedals remain on track, it would seem CR has enough faith in the automaker to give back its coveted Recommended ratings.
And what of suggestions that there may be more to Toyota's unintended acceleration woes than faulty floor mats and gas pedals? "We want to see if anything bubbles up from the Senate hearings... A lot of people pointed to the electronics, but I don't see anything at the moment that points to an electronic issue."
Tired of Toyota recall news? Try out the recall-free version of Autoblog.
[Source:
AOL Autos | Image: Scott Olson/Getty]
Consumer Reports may restore Toyota "Recommended" ratings next week originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 01 Mar 2010 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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