Toyota faces US, Japan probe on Prius brakes

February 04, 2010 01:48 pm | Updated December 15, 2016 10:56 pm IST - TOKYO

In this photograph taken on Wednesday, Jan. 13, 2010, unidentified shopper looks over a 2010 Toyota Prius on display at the National Western Stock Show and Rodeo in Denver. Photo: AP

In this photograph taken on Wednesday, Jan. 13, 2010, unidentified shopper looks over a 2010 Toyota Prius on display at the National Western Stock Show and Rodeo in Denver. Photo: AP

Toyota faced fresh doubts about braking problems in its prized Prius, with complaints ballooning to about 180 in the U.S. and Japan, as the automaker sought to salvage its tattered reputation amid massive global recalls over gas-pedal problems in eight other models.

In Washington, U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood startled the public with a comment, which he later retracted, that Americans should park their recalled Toyotas unless driving to dealers for accelerator repairs.

Toyota, scheduled to report quarterly earnings later Thursday, declined comment on LaHood's remarks. It also said it will explain the Prius braking problems. Details were not immediately available.

Doubts about Prius brakes are growing rapidly amid Japanese media reports that Toyota has been repairing electronic problems with the brake systems in cars that went on sale from last month. That raised the question of what was being done to fix the problems in thousands of new Prius cars already on the roads.

The remodelled gas-electric Prius hybrid, which went on sale in the U.S. and Japan in May 2009, was not part of the most recent recall over gas pedals, numbering about 4.5 million vehicles around the world.

Japan's transport ministry has ordered the company to investigate complaints of brake problems with the hybrid. LaHood has said his department was looking into brake problems.

``We are asking Toyota to look into the matter, including possibly making a recall on the Prius,'' Transport Minister Seiji Maehara said.

The problems with the Prius are another blow to Toyota in the U.S. _ its biggest market _ and an embarrassment in the automaker's loyal home market of Japan.

Company officials had repeatedly said cars in Japan weren't covered by its overseas recalls because they used Japanese supplier Denso, hinting the world's biggest automaker was doing a better job maintaining quality control in Japan.

The Prius, the world's best-selling hybrid vehicle, has been extremely popular in Japan because of government incentives that made green cars tax-free.

``The latest Prius troubles have really damaged Toyota's brand. Uncertainty over the Prius troubles will only prompt more consumers to dump Toyota,'' said Roichi Saito, auto analyst with Mizuho Investors Securities Co. in Tokyo.

Toyota spokeswoman Ririko Takeuchi said on Thursday the automaker was aware of 77 complaints in Japan about braking problems for the Prius _ just a day after the Japanese government had confirmed 14 complaints. About 100 complaints over Prius brakes have been filed in the U.S.

Toyota shares tumbled on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, falling 3.5 percent Thursday morning to 3,280 yen ($36) after plunging 5.7 percent the previous day. Since Jan. 21, when the U.S. recalls were announced, the stock has lost about 22 percent.

In the U.S., harried dealers began receiving parts to repair defective gas pedals in millions of vehicles and said they'd be extending their hours deep into the night to try and catch up. Toyota said that would solve the problem _ which it said was extremely rare _ of cars unaccountably accelerating.

At a congressional hearing, LaHood said his advice to an owner of a recalled Toyota would be to ``stop driving it. Take it to a Toyota dealer because they believe they have a fix for it.'' His comments prompted new questions and rattled Toyota stockholders, causing shares to plunge 6 percent overnight on Wall Street.

LaHood later told reporters, ``What I said in there was obviously a misstatement. What I meant to say ... was if you own one of these cars or if you're in doubt, take it to the dealer and they're going to fix it.''

Adding to Toyota's woes, LaHood said his department had received new complaints about electronics and would undertake a broad review, looking beyond Toyota vehicles, into whether automobile engines could be disrupted by electromagnetic interference caused by power lines or other sources.

Toyota has said it investigated for electronic problems and failed to find a single case pointing that direction.

But the damage was done for many drivers.

Meredyth Waterman, who bought a 2010 Toyota Corolla in December, said the alarming statements from Washington confused her and she planned to wait until her dealer told her to come get the fix to bring her car in for repairs.

``If it is largely believed to be a rare instance, why would he tell people to stop driving their cars?'' asked Waterman, of Burrillville, R.I. ``It was an irresponsible thing to say.''

Toyota is set to face additional questioning from U.S. congressional and other government investigators. Toyota has shut down several new vehicle assembly lines and is rushing parts to dealers to fix problems with the accelerators, trying to preserve a reputation of building safe, durable vehicles.

Late last year, Toyota recalled about 5 million vehicles over problems with floor mats trapping gas pedals and on Jan. 21, recalled some 2.3 million vehicles in the U.S. amid concerns that gas pedals could become stuck or be slow to return to the idle position.

The latest recall involves 2009-10 RAV4 crossovers, 2009-10 Corollas, 2009-10 Matrix hatchbacks, 2005-10 Avalons, 2007-10 Camrys, 2010 Highlander crossovers, 2007-10 Tundra pickups and 2008-10 Sequoia SUVs.

U.S. lawmakers who are now digging into the recalls said they would also look into the Prius. Rep. Bart Stupak, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce investigative subcommittee, said his panel would request a briefing from Toyota officials about the hybrid.

Many consumer groups have questioned whether Toyota's gas pedal fix will work and have asserted it could be connected to problems with the electronic throttle control systems.

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