Originally posted by: tk149
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Originally posted by: tk149
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
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I am not sympathetic to claims of "unintended acceleration". I can drive down the freeway and simultaneously floor both the gas and brake pedals on any car I've ever driven and the car will slow down. Unless the owner has failed to maintain the brakes, it's simply not possible for a car to "accelerate out of control".
ZV
Your explanation makes perfect sense in Riner's case, but what about the others stated in the article? Especially the case where the guy was test driving the dealer's Prius with a salesperson in the car. It's certainly possible that the writer picked his quotes, but you'd think that the salesperson would look over and make sure the driver was pushing the correct pedal (i.e. brake pedal), and not the accelerator. What about the Prius that was left unattended and accelerated into another car?
This is all anecdotal evidence, of course, but so was the Xbox 360 RRoD, for months.
In the first case, we don't have the salesman's report. Only the potential buyer's. Hardly a neutral party.
As for the second, cars don't move forward unless someone leaves them in gear. I would put money on the guy having the car in neutral and accidentally bumping the shifter as he exited the car.
Since these cars have been on the road for many years now (going into their 3rd generation) it is very unlikely that this is an endemic problem. Occam's razor suggests that these are all cases of operator error. If you look long enough, I'm sure that most models of cars on the road have a few people claiming that they "just accelerated out of control".
ZV
Good points, thank you. Although the saleswoman is not likely to go on record as acknowledging any kind of malfunction on a product she is trying to sell. Also, why would smoke pour from the tires if the driver was only pushing on the accelerator?
Also, is there anything unusual about the Prius's gear shifter (i.e. computer controlled)? In other words, could there be a physical disconnect between the position of the shifter, and the actual gear engaged? And even if the car were in gear, why would it "slam" into another car? How fast does the thing idle?
Again, it's only anecdotal evidence, and quite possibly inaccurate.