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Woz Cites "Scary" Prius Acceleration Software Problem

theodp writes "Speaking at Discovery Forum 2010, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak went off topic and spoke about a 'very scary' problem with his 2010 Toyota Prius. 'I don't get upset and teed off at things in life, except computers that don't work right,' said Woz, who went on to explain he'd been trying to get through to Toyota and the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration for three months, but could not get anyone to explore an alleged software-related acceleration problem. 'I have a new model that didn't get recalled,' Steve said. 'This new model has an accelerator that goes wild but only under certain conditions of cruise control. And I can repeat it over and over and over again — safely.' Toyota said it investigates all complaints. 'We're in the business of investigating complaints, assessing problems and finding remedies,' said Toyota's John Hanson. 'After man-years of exhaustive testing we have not found any evidence of an electronic [software] problem that would have led to unwanted acceleration.'" We recently discussed other problems Toyota has had with electronic acceleration systems.

53 of 749 comments (clear)

  1. Typical Customer Service Department attitude by renger · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Seems true in nearly all industries: The people they hire to staff customer service are so unqualified that they cannot recognize when the caller actually IS qualified. They have no procedures in place to rapidly escalate calls from customers who actually know more than they do.

    Businesses lose the opportunity to obtain knowledgeable input, because their call centers are staffed by low labor-cost morons. The need to identify technically savvy callers and hand-off those calls to comparably competent staff members.

    1. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Publikwerks · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, but as someone who worked in customer service, the problem is that the ratio of users who know what their talking about vs those who THINK they know what their talking about is approx. 1,000,000 to 1.

    2. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by eln · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The problem is the really competent people almost never actually call customer service, because they know better. 99.9% of the "experts" that call customer service are people who think they know a whole lot, and can talk a good game, but don't actually know what they're talking about. Also, first level techs are basically script-reading drones who get paid garbage wages for an essentially unskilled job. You can't expect people like that to accurately determine if someone is an expert or not.

      The end result is you would end up with a lot of people who sound like they know what they're talking about being escalated and wasting the time of your skilled (and highly paid) engineers.

    3. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This happened internally at my company.

      We had a problem and, unexpectedly, I figured out what it was instead of the appropriate department. They not only ignored the solution but tried every other possible solution before implementing the solution. And they are still (2 years later) pissy about it. The tools I used to solve the problem were disabled.

      I'm sure there is an entire department of Toyota people who would be very embarrassed that a person outside their department AND outside their company AND outside their business figured out the problem when they couldn't.

      But the same thing was true in both cases. Simple logic and noticing details. Woz debugged the problem. I debugged the problem. Most people just don't like to think logically and finely.

      I hope Toyota gets their head out of their posterior exit and listens to him. People have died over this issue (including a cop trained in emergency driving along with his wife and 2 kids).

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    4. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I think you mean 1 to 1000000.

    5. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by torstenvl · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yes but as someone who reads Slashdot regularly, the problem is that the ratio of users who know how to use ratios vs those who THINK they know how to use ratios is approx. 1,000,000 to 1.

      Which wouldn't actually be a problem, except that you're the 1.

    6. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Xest · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Most customer service centres seem to be manned by people that would fail the Turing test.

      Last time I called Dell about a laptop that was completely dead, no power lights, no fans, they asked me what the error message on screen was and it took a few minutes to explain to them something as simple as the fact that I couldn't get an error message on screen because the laptop was dead.

      It was probably one of the most epic examples of human idiocy I have ever encountered. The worst part is that I understand these people are given little flow charts, or on screen wizards, so he must've managed to click past the first box that checked whether the system even turned on or not and then been incapable of handling the idea that my response didn't fit his next question.

      I don't even know why places like Dell even have customer services anymore really, they outsource because it's cheap, but the centres they outsource to are cheap because they're incompetent. They might as well drop the customer service lark altogether and save themselves even more, if I phoned Dell and got told by an automated message that customer service didn't exist anymore, it wouldn't have been any less helpful than the guy above that I did actually get through to.

    7. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Glonoinha · · Score: 3, Funny

      Here's a clue this particular caller might have known what he was talking about : his said 'Hi, my name is Steve Jobs.'

      --
      Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    8. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Glonoinha · · Score: 4, Funny

      Whoops - just read TFA. He's the other Apple guy. But close enough.
      I wonder if the help desk at Toyota is hiring, because I just passed their test.

      --
      Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    9. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Publikwerks · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes I did. I have no doubt, however, that I will be continued to be corrected throughout this thread. It is my destiny, and I can accept that.

    10. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Publikwerks · · Score: 5, Funny

      Sweet, the biggest blunder of the thread no longer belong to me!

    11. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I did the same thing at comcast before I left.

      I embarassed an entire divisional Office. they were still talking about how to approach the problem and I produced a working prototype to the CTO in their meeting. He berated the other office of 8 that could not even get started on a project that I solved on my own in 1 week.

      They still hate me to this day, and I've been gone for 4 years.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    12. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by iamhassi · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "Last time I called Dell about a laptop that was completely dead, no power lights, no fans, they asked me what the error message on screen was and it took a few minutes to explain to them something as simple as the fact that I couldn't get an error message on screen because the laptop was dead."

      Next time you call support take a video, it might be the next "verizon math fail" with 30,000+ hits. All that bad press over $71.

      I had a problem with a Whirlpool wash machine. It was a few years old and the warranty expired, but I took a video of the problem and posted it on Youtube. Within a week and less than 50 views I had an email from someone claiming to be whirlpool offering to help resolve the situation with a 800 number and extension attached.

      I use to work tech support for a huge hosting provider (they're in the top 5). We'd get threats of lawsuits every day, but one time someone blogged about us and management had an all hands meeting, telling us to ignore lawsuits because those are easy to fight but if a customer threatens to blog about us to escalate to a manager immediately (usually we could only offer manager call backs... yes i know stupid).

      People forget how powerful the internet is yet we see the effects of millions of /. readers every day.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    13. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Dishevel · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yes I did. I have no doubt, however, that I will be continued to be corrected throughout this thread. It is my destiny, and I can accept that.

      I will correct your statement that you can accept that. I believe that you in fact can not accept being corrected constantly. Unless you are married. But this is /.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    14. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is a more general problem: Why do companies employ people whose only job is to relay communication between their customers and the web? If the workflow is that rigid, just put it online. Let me connect to the web, answer the questions, and get the repair authorised without interacting with a human at all. No human is required because no judgement is being exercised. Then, with the money you save, hire twice as many humans for the second-tier support positions, where judgement is required.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    15. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by ByOhTek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And while Woz is known in computer geek circles, why should some random 9-to-5er paid-hourly desk jockey in a car company know who the hell he is?

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    16. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Publikwerks · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Haha, I am married. And I'm corrected constantly because, as I have learned, I am always wrong.

    17. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by tsstahl · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Most people just don't like to think logically and finely.

      Most often the troubleshooter is simply too close to the problem. You are describing logical troubleshooting of how the system actually works, they are working from the perspective of how it is supposed to work. The great engineers know how to think like idiots. Great engineers also recognize competence no matter the source. :)

    18. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by UnknowingFool · · Score: 5, Insightful

      People complain why Apples are more expensive, and this is just one reason. If I have a problem with an Apple product, I can take it to an Apple store. Sure I have to make a reservation and wait, but I get a live person. I could have called the support center and got a script, but the extra I paid for my Apple product entitles me to in-store support.

      For example, my iPhone just died one day. It never turned on. At first I thought it was not charged, but after 20 mins of charging, it still didn't respond. So I thought it could be the battery. The tech asks me what's wrong with the phone. I respond: "It's dead, Jim." He laughs and hooks it up to his diagnostic machine. It takes him a while to get it to power up but not after he removed parts.

      Amazingly the iPhone records a lot about its activities. I could see on his diagnostic screen all the times I synced in the last two weeks, how often I charged it and for how long, etc. His diagnosis is the phone wasn't coming out of sleep mode but it had plenty of power. There was a bug that they believed they fixed in the last major patch that should have fixed it, but maybe they didn't fix all the causes. Since I had 3 months left on my warranty, he gave me a new phone. I'm sure it was refurbished and not entirely new but it was pretty good service.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    19. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by quadrox · · Score: 4, Funny

      No you're not always wrong!

    20. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by vrt3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Knowing how to reliably reproduce a problem generally goes a *very* long way towards finding the cause of the problem and eventually the solution.

      --
      This sig under construction. Please check back later.
    21. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by mrdoogee · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You jest, but I'd say that among the general populace, Woz is now more famous for having dated Kathy Griffin and being a contestant on "Dancing..." than for inventing the personal computer. Part of it is his easygoing demeanor, he doesn't grab attention like Jobs does, and never got quite as rich as Gates did. The other part is of course that the general populace are mouth breathing troglodytes who don't even understand how their computers work, much less that there are highly intelligent people who invented them.

      Ranting aside, this should have been addressed by Toyota whether it was Woz, or Jim-Bob from West Virginia reporting it.

    22. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by Gilmoure · · Score: 3, Funny

      Shoulda' said he was the Izard of Woz. That woulda' got their attention.

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    23. Re:Typical Customer Service Department attitude by mrdoogee · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not to mention that virtually every "scripted" support dept. will file your ticket in the "pile of perpetual ignorance" if the problem isn't easy to reproduce. Its an easy out for a lazy service dept. "Well, we couldn't reproduce the problem, so you must be a liar. Thanks for calling!"

  2. Disconnect..... by Mark19960 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They exist between developers/engineers and end users.
    You have call center workers that log this stuff in and then someone else that reads thru it and decides what gets passed on.
    The only time it actually makes it up the chain is when it hits CNN because someone died, or in the case of someone famous that says something to the media.
    Only now will they hear of it and investigate it.
    The guy says he can reproduce it, and it's Woz.... if he say it's there I believe him.
    It's too bad that most bugs go unfixed because of the barriers put in place.

  3. I don't believe it by kimvette · · Score: 4, Funny

    This new model has an accelerator that goes wild but only under certain conditions of cruise control. And I can repeat it over and over and over again — safely.'

    Um, fact check. 134hp, that's engine + synergy drive. 0-60 is about eight weeks (well, 9.8 seconds but what's the difference?)). Under no circumstance whatsoever short of driving off a cliff will a stock Prius accelerate wildly. Sorry Woz! ;)

    (Uh, I'm kidding. Obviously.)

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  4. Re:Like Microsoft by truthsearch · · Score: 3, Informative

    "A new car built by my company leaves somewhere traveling at 60 mph. The rear differential locks up. The car crashes and burns with everyone trapped inside. Now, should we initiate a recall? Take the number of vehicles in the field, A, multiply by the probable rate of failure, B, multiply by the average out-of-court settlement, C. A times B times C equals X. If X is less than the cost of a recall, we don't do one."

  5. Jalopnik has been covering this... by GPLDAN · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have no great love for Wert and the Jalopniks, finding them to consistently side with the GOP on social issues and sidestep into political discourse way too much for a blog on cars.

    However, they have been frontrunning this story and trying to lead the charge to push it up to the MSM.

    Woz is Woz, he needs no introduction on /. If he calls bullshit on software design, it will get attention. Worse off, as Jalopnik shows on the bit on the Today show appearance by the Toyota CEO - they seem willing and ready to lie through their teeth about what was known, when it was known, and what their responses to the NTSB have been. Matt Lauer is sitting there with a copy of the NTSB report on his lap, saying they knew humidity was causing pedals to stick in 2007, and there is the Toyota CEO lying his ass off, saying only in October of 2009 was it brought to their attention. Toyota is recalling a shitload of Camrys and Corollas, and now Woz drops this bomb about Prius software design on them. It's time for the Hedge fund managers to make more money and short the hell out of Toyota.

    Note, in NTSB reports - many of these cars have had the brake pads TOTALLY burned through, indicating that once these cars took off on people, they COULD NOT stop. In the fatality cases, if the driver had forced the car into neutral (the linkage would have resisted, you would have needed to really muscle it) they could have saved themselves. Instead they rode the brake into an obstacle.

    This is PR nightmare time for Toyota. It will make the Ford-Firestone debacle look like simple times.

    1. Re:Jalopnik has been covering this... by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 4, Funny

      The Japanese do it to save face, the Americans do it to cover their ass. Same behavior, but different parts of the anatomy.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    2. Re:Jalopnik has been covering this... by Minwee · · Score: 5, Funny

      When you've got one firmly planted in the other, it's really no difference.

  6. Safely. noted this one on /. before: by leuk_he · · Score: 5, Informative

    woz said he could reproduce safely .. I bet it is the same isssue as : This poster op

    "I can nudge my cruise control speed lever and my speed barely goes up, say from 80 to 81.I nudge at again and again, up to 83. Then I nudge it again and the car takes off, no speed limit. Nudging the cruise speed control lever down has no effect until I've done it about 10 times or more. By then my Prius is doing 97. It's scary because it's so wrong and so out of your normal control. I tested this over and over the night I observed it."

  7. Re:Like Microsoft by eln · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That quote ignores the influence of the mass media. From all accounts, this problem with Toyota's accelerator is extremely rare. However, Toyota has been getting absolutely reamed in the press for weeks over it. There's no telling how many potential customers they've lost because of this, but the damage to their previously spotless reputation for quality could take decades to recover. When people talk about quality reliable automobiles, Toyota and Honda are almost always the first two names that come up. For a company like that to have an issue like this, and to have handled it like they did, is devastating.

  8. Re:But it's the Apple dude who says so! by kannibal_klown · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To play devil's advocate...

    Woz's problem might be specific to his own car.

    I had an issue with my Cadillac's throttle assembly 3 months after buying the car (new). It was a bad sensor.

    At the time I didn't know what it was (throttle, fuel line, transmission, etc). I searched through the big forum where EVERYONE reports their CTS problems and I only found 1 guy with a similar (yet different) issue. There was no tech bulletin about it, no forum posts, etc. There were other common issues out there which I managed to avoid, but this one was my particular piece that was the issue.

    In short: until the car's engine temp reached equilibrium, pressing the accelerator more than 1/2 way caused the engine to buck wildly. It was like I was alternating between flooring the gas pedal and taking my foot off every second. This made merging and and stop signs quite unsafe, and I was able to replicate it 100% of the time so long as the car was cooled down first.

    I had to take it to the shop 3 flippin' times before they addressed it. The first few times they said "no problem, drive it until it's worse." I had to sit in the car with a tester and finally told him "xxxx it, just floor it." He flipped out and what the car did and called a tech from corporate to look at it.

    So, it's possible he has an issue that's related to the Recall but not part of the same batch of issues. It's a long shot, but still possible.

  9. Honestly, officer, it wasn't me! by gwayne · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I got a speeding ticket last year while driving my mother-in-law's new Toyota Sienna for the first time. I was following a vehicle through a work-zone with the cruise control set at 50-mph (so I thought). The vehicle in front of me changed lanes and the van accelerated rapidly to 65-mph...right past a cop. I tried to explain to him that the van did it, but he didn't care.

    I know now that the digital cruise control, in combination with the collision-avoidance "radar" in the Toyotas will regulate the vehicle speed, but what happens when the vehicle in front of you moves or accelerates is sometimes erratic behavior. Could this be related to what's happening? Is it user error?

    1. Re:Honestly, officer, it wasn't me! by ekimminau · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you have your cruise set to 65 and it drops you down to 50 to keep from rearending the guy in front of you in a work zone and, when he moves, your vehicle accelerates back up to 65 the problem is behind the wheel. There is no excuse for you running cruise in a work zone and allowing you vehicle to exceed the posted speedlimit.

      --
      Armaments, 2-9-21 And Saint Attila raised the hand grenade up on high, saying, 'O Lord, bless this Thy hand grenade' N
  10. Almost as frustrating as the article by SendBot · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I can imagine that woz explained specifically what the problem is (and how to reproduce it), but the article doesn't mention any specifics. Now I have nothing empirical to form an opinion off of.

    Thanks a lot modern news media!

  11. Do not Fuck with the WOZ! by Sfing_ter · · Score: 5, Funny

    Do NOT Fuck with the WOZ!
    Just DON'T
    It is not prudent.

    --
    A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing. Emo Philips
  12. Re:But it's the Apple dude who says so! by mcgrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As someone who has written a program I was sure was bug-free after repeated testing, only to have somebody who doesn't know jack about programming find a bug, I have to disagree; Woz is probably right.

    Especially remembering about the Pinto gas tank; ten bucks to fix a deadly problem they kept secret. How do you know the manufacturer found nothing? I trust a corporation about as far as I can throw their headquarters building. I would not be surprised if it came out that there is a problem, the manufacturer knows about it, but it will cost ten bucks per car for a recall. They'll weigh cost of the possible lawsuits against the surety of the cost of the recall, and if the suits are cheaper, they're not going to care about people dying.

    Corporations do NOT care about your safety unless it is monetarily profitable to them or a government forces them to.

  13. TERRIBLE ADVICE by dtolman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You do NOT turn off the car - this could lock your wheel, preventing you from steering altogether. Whats more, you'll lose power brakes - you know - the things that will stop your car quickly. Instead:

    Put the car in NEUTRAL. The engine will disengage.
    Hit the brake HARD. Do not pump.
    Steer the car off the road, and once its stopped, you can PARK it and turn off the engine.

  14. Re:A Public Service Announcement to AllToyota Driv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    The vehicle was push button and pushing the button while driving doesn't do anything. Computer users may be inclined to hold the power button down for a few seconds but a computer illiterate person may not think of that. In the case of the push button start Lexus you have to hold the button down for like 3-5 seconds to force a shutdown while driving.

    Also, the automatic is a weird looking gated one similiar to this http://pictures.topspeed.com/IMG/crop/200605/2006-lexus-is350-27_460x0w.jpg

    There are two nutrals, one is clearly labeled and one is not. The problem is that the clearly labeled one is locked out while driving and the other one isn't clearly labeled... Combine that with a driver unfamiliar with his vehicle (this was a rental) and you have a recipe for disaster in a panic situation.

    This topic has been thoroughly covered on the Internet.

  15. Re:Safely. noted this one on /. before: by Spazztastic · · Score: 5, Informative

    Look at the poster's name, that IS woz.

    --
    Posts not to be taken literally. Almost everything is sarcasm.
  16. Re:Woz, you're an idiot by Tobor+the+Eighth+Man · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuously_variable_transmission

    "A continuously variable transmission (CVT) is a transmission which can change steplessly through an infinite number of effective gear ratios between maximum and minimum values. This contrasts with other mechanical transmissions that only allow a few different distinct gear ratios to be selected. The flexibility of a CVT allows the driving shaft to maintain a constant angular velocity over a range of output velocities."

    It then goes on to note that a Prius actually has something a bit different, since it derives power from both the motor and the engine, and not from a single source.

    Also, about Woz's thing... I wonder if it doesn't have more to do with impatience than run-away acceleration. The Prius's cruise control accelerates gradually when you increase the threshhold, it doesn't lurch forward and immediately try to attain the new speed. But I believe if you keep pressing it, the threshhold eventually gets high enough above the current speed that it uses a lower gear ratio and will accelerate more quickly to what the CC is now set at.

    I know my VW Golf will eventually downshift and leap forward if you increase the cruise control faster than the car can accelerate in whatever it's current gear is. Since you may, by then, have set the CC to like 20mph above where you're currently at, it may indeed seem like a runaway car.

  17. Re:Safely. noted this one on /. before: by Jesus_666 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Which only serves to reinforce the notion that it is, in fact, the same problem.

    --
    USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
  18. Dealership? by ArcherB · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why doesn't he just take the car to the dealership? He could be making a bigger deal out of this than is necessary.

    It seems to be a bad habit people in high places have of trying to only deal with others in high places. His cruise control may have a problem. That doesn't mean he needs to call the CEO of Toyota directly to get the problem resolved. His dealer should be able to take care of it.

    --
    There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
  19. Eureka moment in Toyota R&D HQ: by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 4, Funny

    Toyota tech is shouting: "Found it! Found it. I know what is causing the problem. The driver is named Woz"

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  20. Pro American propaganda by harris+s+newman · · Score: 3, Funny

    I love my Toyota, and am sick of all the Toyota bashing. I didn't know that Slashdot was a tool of the propaganda industry.

  21. Re:This always made me wonder by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you think that approach is stupid, I suggest you never fly. Exactly the same approach is used in avionics, although I think they usually need a majority from 7 systems. Each system is designed by a separate team. They all solve the same problems, but in different ways, so hopefully they'll have different bugs.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  22. Problem and explanation discussed here before by laing · · Score: 3, Informative

    See Woz's original post here. And the explanation here. It could be argued that Toyota should change their cruise control interface so it doesn't keep increasing the "set" speed beyond a few mph above the actual speed. As long as you are aware of how it works, it does not pose a danger.

  23. Engine Limiters by Cadre · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is absolutely the correct reaction. A slightly more aggressive tact might be to drop the vehicle in low, which might blow the engine but would also severely limit your speed.

    Most modern cars have engine RPM limiters; throw it into neutral with a stuck throttle and it may sound like it's going to blow up but it'll be fine. In automatic transmissions, selecting low is really only a suggestion and most automatics will freely ignore a manually selected downshift if it leads to an over-rev condition.

    The only way to over-rev most cars these days is have a standard transmission and miss a shift coming down.

    --
    All editorial writers ever do is come down from the hill after the battle is over and shoot the wounded.
  24. My 1994 Chrysler New Yorker Had Similar Problem by JakFrost · · Score: 3, Informative

    Re:Floor mat, really? (Score:5, Interesting)
    by SteveWoz (152247) writes: Alter Relationship on 2009-11-04 0:12 (#29973870)

    I have owned many Prius's. I currently drive a 2010 one. Let's say that I'm in some place where the speed 85 mph is legal. I can nudge my cruise control speed lever and my speed barely goes up, say from 80 to 81.I nudge at again and again, up to 83. Then I nudge it again and the car takes off, no speed limit. Nudging the cruise speed control lever down has no effect until I've done it about 10 times or more. By then my Prius is doing 97. It's scary because it's so wrong and so out of your normal control. I tested this over and over the night I observed it.

    It's scary because you don't think of things like putting the car in neutral when this happens. I am sure you can't turn the car off with the keyless power button, the only option on this model.

    Braking does disable this scary cruise control effect. It is a natural response, so the problem is mitigated a great deal.

    I have not seen this happen before so I think it's new to the 2010. I have the package which includes parallel parking assist and cruise control distance limiter.

    My old 1994 Chrysler New Yorker had a similar problem with cruise control but it wasn't as acute as was Steve describes. If I was going up any small hill on a highway and I hit the cruise control speed up button once, twice, three times the car would try to accelerate a little and then rev up like mad and try to speed up by almost +10 miles per hour until it was going much faster than I intended, making me hold the coast button for a while unit it slows down or by turning off cruise control all together with the Off button or by a light tap on the breaks.

    Oh and I'm not trying to play down the problem with Toyota's accelerator pedal recall or now this cruise control issue, there is a real issue there that needs to be addressed and it appears like there is some cover-up and a lack of accountability and openness about these problems from Toyota's reactions.

  25. On Opinions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    If a man is alone in a forest with no woman nearby to hear him...

    And he expresses an opinion.

    Is he still wrong?

  26. Unwanted acceleration? by PPH · · Score: 3, Funny

    Its a Prius. Toyota still hasn't solved the "wanted acceleration" problem yet.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  27. Not exactly a voluntary recall by Animats · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The New York Times reported that Toyota stopped selling their defective cars only after the NTSB "asked" them to do it.

    That's not exactly "voluntary". The way DOT and CPSC recalls work is that first they ask the manufacturer to do a "voluntary" recall. If the manufacturer says no, they issue a mandatory recall notice.

    About once a decade, some manufacturer is dumb enough to let things go that far. It means national TV coverage ("The National Transportation Safety Board today ordered the recall of all NNN model XXX cars.") It means that, instead of a obliquely worded letter from the manufacturer, every owner gets an official letter from the Government with words like "dangerous and defective product" in big black type. The manufacturer involved usually experiences a large, permanent drop in sales.