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Posts Tagged ‘Toyota’

Al-Qaeda’s Ride Of Choice

by 1389AD ( 118 Comments › )
Filed under Afghanistan, Al Qaeda, Canada, Cars & Trucks, Military, Open thread, Transportation, Weapons at November 18th, 2010 - 4:00 pm

It’s the Toyota Hilux, a brand unfamiliar to most consumers in the US.

Taliban forces in Toyota Hilux truck

Newsweek: Why Rebel Groups Love the Toyota Hilux

As the war in Afghanistan escalated several years ago, counterinsurgency expert David Kilcullen, a member of the team that designed the Iraq surge for Gen. David Petraeus, began to notice a new tattoo on some insurgent Afghan fighters. It wasn’t a Taliban tattoo. It wasn’t even Afghan. It was a Canadian maple leaf.

When a perplexed Kilcullen began to investigate, he says, he discovered that the incongruous flags were linked to what he says is one of the most important, and unnoticed, weapons of guerrilla war in Afghanistan and across the world: the lightweight, virtually indestructible Toyota Hilux truck.

“In Afghanistan in particular,” he says, “[the trucks are] incredibly well respected.” So well respected, in fact, that some enterprising fraudsters thought them worthy of ripping off. The imitations, Kilcullen says, had flooded the market, leaving disappointed fighters in their wake. But then “a shipment of high-quality [real] Hiluxes arrived, courtesy of the Canadian government,” he explains. “They had little Canadian flags on the back. Because they were the real deal, and because of how the Hilux is seen, over time, strangely, the Canadian flag has become a symbol of high quality across the country. Hence the tattoos.”
[…]
While Taliban leader Mullah Omar reportedly likes to roll in a Chevy Suburban and Osama Bin Laden is said to have preferred the Hilux’s bigger brother, the Landcruiser, when he was able to move freely, most Al Qaeda lieutenants drive Hiluxes, according to a New York Times report from the early 2000s. Even today, says Kilcullen, “It’s a bit of a sign you’re dealing with Al Qaeda when you come across them in Pakistan. They use the twin-cab version, because you can carry people and stuff in the back, and also mount a heavy weapon in the pickup.”

I find it both interesting and disheartening that US-made trucks don’t hold up anywhere near as well as the Toyota Hilux, and cannot be kept running as easily under difficult conditions.

An experiment conducted by British TV show Top Gear in 2006 offers one explanation. The show’s producers bought an 18-year-old Hilux diesel with 190,000 miles on the odometer for $1,500. They then crashed it into a tree, submerged it in the ocean for five hours, dropped it from about 10 feet, tried to crush it under an RV, drove it through a portable building, hit it with a wrecking ball, and set it on fire. Finally they placed it on top of a 240-foot tower block that was then destroyed in a controlled demolition. When they dug it out of the rubble, all it took to get it running again was hammers, wrenches, and WD-40. They didn’t even need spare parts.

The Hilux was originally designed, says Kevin Hunter, president of Toyota’s design division in California, as “a lightweight truck with big tires on big wheels. It was meant as a recreational truck, a truck people could have fun with. They also have a really high ground clearance, which means they’re ideal for off-road work.”

Read the rest.

As shown in the accompanying photo essay, not only al Qaeda and the Taliban, but also other insurgent groups, refugees, and even US forces like this particular truck.

View the Top Gear video:


The Toyota Pedal – From the Absurd to the Crooked

by snork ( 57 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Technology at March 14th, 2010 - 7:00 pm

I smelled BS when this story just got off the ground. Maybe that has something to do with the 2386 metric shitloads of BS popping up all around this story.

First, an interesting look at NTSHA stats on overall reported cases of accelerator problems over the past decade.

[T]he trend of the total number of unintended acceleration complaints to NHTSA over the years.

2000: 1415
2001: 1345
2002: 1460
2003: 1446
2004: 1426
2005: 1112
2006: 878
2007: 876
2008: 456
2009: 251

So while the numbers of cars on the road increases, and the manufacturers go to electronic throttle controls, the number of reported problems with sticky throttles drops dramatically. Whoda thunk, that if you replace a system with moving parts with one without, that the problems decrease?

Hide the decline, MSM.

Then at the Atlantic, Megan McArdle digs up some more stats:

The Los Angeles Times recently did a story detailing all of the NHTSA reports of Toyota “sudden acceleration” fatalities, and, though the Times did not mention it, the ages of the drivers involved were striking.

In the 24 cases where driver age was reported or readily inferred, the drivers included those of the ages 60, 61, 63, 66, 68, 71, 72, 72, 77, 79, 83, 85, 89–and I’m leaving out the son whose age wasn’t identified, but whose 94-year-old father died as a passenger.

How odd that old people are having all of the problems with pedals sticking, having electrical problems, and having interference from magnets and cell phones.

Then we have this bit of Twilight Zone:

“On the very day Toyota was making a high-profile defense of its cars, one of them was speeding out of control,” said CBS News–and a vast number of other media outlets worldwide. The driver of a 2008 Toyota Prius, James Sikes, called 911 to say his accelerator was stuck, he was zooming faster than 90 miles per hour and absolutely couldn’t slow down.

It got far more dramatic, though. The California Highway Patrol responded and “To get the runaway car to stop, they actually had to put their patrol car in front of the Prius and step on the brakes.” During over 20 harrowing minutes, according to NBC’s report, Sikes “did everything he could to try to slow down that Prius.” Others said, “Radio traffic indicated the driver was unable to turn off the engine or shift the car into neutral.”

Damn thing’s haunted! Hearkening back to the worst sitcom ever produced:

But it turns out that, despite this being reported on the infallible CBS and NBC news,

In fact, almost none of this was true. Virtually every aspect of Sikes’s story as told to reporters makes no sense. His claim that he’d tried to yank up the accelerator could be falsified, with his help, in half a minute. And now we even have an explanation for why he’d pull such a stunt, beyond the all-American desire to have 15 minutes of fame (recall the “Balloon Boy Hoax” from October) and the aching need to be perceived as a victim.

Well, dearie me. Why didn’t those professional journalist peoples check this? In fact, this alone should have been reason to check their boots:

Now here’s the potential smoking gun: Sikes told the reporters that “I was reaching down and trying to pull up on the gas pedal. It didn’t move at all; it was stationary.” That’s awfully daring for somebody who insisted he didn’t even want to take a hand off his steering wheel, notwithstanding that he did so to hold his phone.

Try that sometime. You’re barreling down the freeway doing 90. Now this guy who was too much of a pussy to find the transmission shift lever was able to reach the gas pedal? Maybe if he’s a chimpanzee.

So why did he do it? Sleuth work at the Web sites Jalopnik.com and Gawker.com reveals that Sikes and his wife Patty in 2008 filed for bankruptcy and are over $700,000 in debt. Among their creditors is Toyota Financial Services for a lease on a 2008 Toyota Prius, with value at time of bankruptcy of $20,494. The Jalopnik Web site shows a copy of Toyota’s secured claims form, though when Jalopnik questioned Sikes by e-mail he denied being behind on his Prius payments.

Sikes also has a history of filing insurance claims for allegedly stolen items that are slowly coming to light. In 2001 he filed a police report with the Merced County Sheriff’s Department for $58,000 in stolen property, including jewelry, a prosumer mini-DV camera and gear, and $24,000 in cash, according to Fox40 in Sacramento. His bankruptcy documents show a 2008 payment of $7,400 for an allegedly stolen saxophone and clothes.

Oh. Maybe he wasn’t being completely honest with us. I feel used.

The Toyota Gas Pedal – Finally a Good Media Article

by snork ( 61 Comments › )
Filed under Media, Technology at March 3rd, 2010 - 4:30 pm

Most media articles about technical matters are junk. This isn’t just true of technology; lawyers have the exact same complaint regarding media reporting of court decisions; they have a way of generating paragraph after paragraph of mind-numbing verbiage without even stating exactly what the decision was, and what the arguments were.

So leave it to – one more time – Popular Mechanics to do this right. Recall that shortly after 9/11, PM was the only media outlet to publish a thorough, detailed debunking of the Van Jones truther conspiracy theories. This is the kind of actual, you know, information that helps separate fact from fiction.

Specifically, the sensors are a magnetic Hall-effect type, and there are two separate sensors within the assembly housing that the computer checks against each other. What they didn’t say, but would make sense is that the sensors are mounted with opposing polarity so that a stray magnetic field (if some idiot dropped a magnet) would flag an error. So their conclusions are:

– Cell phones can’t have anything to do with it.
– Magnets can’t cause a problem without flagging an error in the computer.
– The thing that that auto shop “professor” did was extremely artificial, and virtually impossible in real life.
– The most likely problem, as the author suggests, is the loose nut behind the wheel.

I think most engineers would agree.

As for who stands to gain by sensationalizing all of this, once again, it’s hard to know where ignorance stops and malice starts.