Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Toyota Senate Hearing: Brake Overrides To Be "Recommended" By Feds?


The Obama administration may "recommend" automakers install brake override systems in an effort to prevent unintended acceleration, according to U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.

Brake override kills power to the engine when both the brake and gas pedals are pressed simultaneously.

LaHood testified before a Senate committee looking into the Toyota gas pedal recall Tuesday...a hearing in which he and the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration took nearly as much heat as Toyota.

Full details from the New York Times.  Video replay from C-SPAN here.

Feds: Toyota Death Toll 52 Since 2000



The Detroit News says the government has updated the number of people killed in accidents linked to unintended acceleration in the past ten years. It's now at 52.  Details here.

Live Video Streaming: Toyota Senate Hearings


This time it's the Senate Commerce Committee, Science and Transportation that wants answers. In the hot seat: U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, NHTSA administrator David Strickland, and Center for Auto Safety executive director Clarence Ditlow.

Hearings start at 10AM Eastern (7AM Pacific) and will go til 5:30 PM Eastern (2:30 Pacific). Click here to watch live streaming.

GM Recalls 1.3 Million Cars For Power Steering Trouble




Well, it's now a recall. 1.3 million Cobalts, Pontiac G5s and their Canadian and Mexican variants.

The Detroit News has full details here.

Reuters: Zero Percent Interest For 5 Years; 2 Years Free Maintenance On New Toyotas


It's the favorite question of car salesmen everywhere: "What would it take to get you to buy this car today?"

Sources tell Reuters that Toyota thinks the answer might be 0% financing for five years and 2 years worth of free maintenance. The full story here.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Dodge Ram 3500 Laramie Crew Cab Review


What you see is the new Dodge Ram 3500 Laramie Crew Cab in its natural environment. The 3500 is a one-ton pickup...the kind of thing best suited for hauling huge horse trailers (or Brahma bull trailers) around. The ideal rodeo vehicle.

In fact, I would have said that the market for this was pretty well limited to the horses for business and/or pleasure set until I drove it.

You see, as civilized as trucks have become over the years, there's a sliding scale and it has to do with towing/hauling capacity and heavy duty status.  It applies across Chevy, Ford, GMC and Dodge pickups. A 1500 is a half-ton pickup...light duty. These have become pretty comfy cruisers.

2500? That's a 3/4-ton. Now we're on the entry end of heavy duty...you climb up to get in and you'd better hang on, because the ride is usually noticeably rougher than the 1500.

And the 3500? Well, unless you're going commercial hauling, that's the big boy. One ton, riding high and....well, like a truck.

It's tough to tame a one-ton, but somehow, Dodge has done it. The 3500 Laramie Crew Cab I drove for a week was not only luxurious, but actually comfortable to drive. Parking? Not so much. I've had smaller apartments.



The key to the livability here seems to be the Laramie trim level. You can get a 3500 for as little as $35,630, but it's a 2-door, bare bones beast. At the base ST trim, a Crew Cab like ours begins at $39,200.

So pop an extra $10,745 (total base $49,945) into the calculator and the transformation is amazing. Suddenly, leather trimmed bucket seats are part of the package, along with heated second row seats, ventilated front seats, an AM/FM/Sirius/CD/mp3/DVD audio system (506 watt Alpine Premium Sound with 9 speakers and a subwoofer), 17 inch aluminum wheels and a bunch of brightwork to make it look...can you say this about a one-ton?....pretty.

The beautification continued on our tester with extra-cost paint...the Deep Water Blue Pearl Coat adds $225 to the sticker...and by the time the Dodge PR deparment finished with the six-speed automatic transmission, power sunroof, a further upgraded audio system (with a 30 gig hard drive and navigation) and Sirius Backseat TV, the price (with destination charge) was $56,820.

Now, that, cowboys and cowgirls, is steep...but it's a testament to just how good the all-new Ram 3500 is that at no point did I think it wasn't worth it.  And a big part of that is the engine. The 6.7 liter Cummins Turbo Diesel engine is a marvel...quiet, smooth and powerful. 350 horsepower, but as always with diesel, the story is in the torque...and it's very nearly impossible to beat 650 pounds per foot of torque at just 1,500 RPM.

The word is that the 2011 Ford Super Duty is an amazing truck. It needs to be. Until it arrives, the Dodge Ram 3500 is king of the mountain.

Unintended Acceleration: Unleaded Solder and Tin Whiskers?


Ever hear of "tin whiskers"?  They grow out of soldered wiring unless the solder has lead in it. But the past few years, environmentalists have pushed for and won concessions about the use of lead. 

The Truth About Cars has a great piece on what happens when those whiskers grow, the electrical gremlins that can occur...and how all this might fit into the unintended acceleration puzzle. It's a must-read.

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