North bergen,New Jersey 3/6/2010 2:14:56 AM
News / Business

The House Committee needs more information regarding Toyota Acceleration Issues.

Toyota insists vehicles have been thoroughly checked but the House Committee Begs to Differ.

A House committee on Friday questioned how thoroughly Toyota has tested its vehicles for sudden acceleration. The committee also wants to know what information is available in Toyota electronic data recorders which could help investigators learn more about what is happening in the vehicles before crashes. For more information regarding the most recent information taking place within the Stock Market, make sure to visit the Most Exclusive and Leading in Depth newsletter website at:   http://www.wallstreetgrand.com/.

 

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A House committee on Friday questioned how thoroughly Toyota has tested its vehicles for sudden acceleration, and asked the Japanese automaker for more records on the safety issues. The House Energy and Commerce Committee told Toyota executive Jim Lentz in a letter that there is "an absence of documents" to show whether the company thoroughly investigated the possibility of unintended acceleration. The committee demanded to know who is involved with the testing and receive quarterly reports detailing allegations of the unwanted acceleration.

"We do not understand the basis for Toyota's repeated assertions that it is 'confident' there are no electronic defects contributing to incidents of sudden unintended acceleration," wrote Chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., and Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich

The committee also wants to know what information is available in Toyota electronic data recorders which could help investigators learn more about what is happening in the vehicles before crashes. A review by the Associated Press found that Toyota has been inconsistent, and sometimes even contradictory in revealing what the devices record and don't record, such as critical data about whether brake or accelerator pedals were depressed at the time of a crash.

 

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