Anticlimactic Post Of The Day: Toyota Recalls, Freezes Sales Of Prius, Sai, Lexus Hybrids

Bertel Schmitt
by Bertel Schmitt

It’s the software, stupid. At a press conference at 3:30 pm Japanese time, Toyota came clean and announced that it will recall 223,068 hybrid vehicles in Japan, including its latest Prius model and three other models–the Sai, the Lexus HS250h and the Prius Plug-In Hybrid, says the Nikkei [sub]. They will get a re-flash of the brake software. Worldwide recalls of affected models will follow. This ends – for now – weeks of waffling over the latest in a series of Toyota problems.

The recall will start Wednesday. A total of 199,666 Prius vehicles manufactured between April 20, 2009 and Jan. 27 of this year will receive new ABS software.

Toyota will also recall a total of 10,820 units of its Sai model manufactured between Oct. 2 and Feb. 8; 12,423 units of its Lexus HS250h manufactured between June 10 and Feb. 8; and 159 units of its Prius plug-in hybrid manufactured between Nov. 25 and Feb. 5. Sales of these vehicles will be suspended from late February through early March, the Japanese Transport Ministry said according to a report in the Nikke i [sub]. The software for these models has not been finished yet.

According to a separate report in the Nikkei [sub], Toyota will recall 400,000 vehicles worldwide, President Akio Toyoda said at the press conference. “We will swiftly act to inform our customers in Europe and the U.S. of our plans.”

The Japanese government hopes Toyota will properly handle the recalls to ease concern among customers, Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirofumi Hirano said Tuesday: ”I would like the company to deal with it properly so that it can alleviate concern among users.’The government will continue to watch developments carefully.”

Meanwhile in the U.S.A., Toyota went on the long overdue public relations offensive. The Wall Street Journal published an op-ed articled by Toyota’s CEO Akio Toyoda. He promised that Toyota will be more vigilant in the future about responding to safety regulators.

“I have spoken with U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and given him my personal assurance that lines of communications with safety agencies and regulators will be kept open, that we will communicate more frequently and that we will be more vigilant in responding to those officials,” Toyoda wrote in the Washington Post. (Via Reuters, on-line version was not available at the time of this typing.)

Bertel Schmitt
Bertel Schmitt

Bertel Schmitt comes back to journalism after taking a 35 year break in advertising and marketing. He ran and owned advertising agencies in Duesseldorf, Germany, and New York City. Volkswagen A.G. was Bertel's most important corporate account. Schmitt's advertising and marketing career touched many corners of the industry with a special focus on automotive products and services. Since 2004, he lives in Japan and China with his wife <a href="http://www.tomokoandbertel.com"> Tomoko </a>. Bertel Schmitt is a founding board member of the <a href="http://www.offshoresuperseries.com"> Offshore Super Series </a>, an American offshore powerboat racing organization. He is co-owner of the racing team Typhoon.

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  • Nick Nick on Feb 09, 2010

    *thunk* Another case of Perrier-Jouet lands on the receiving dock at Dearborn.

  • Stuki Stuki on Feb 09, 2010

    Wonder how much Toyota's perceived high quality has had to do with preventing decision makers from hearing about problems as they started occurring. A year ago, if someone complained about a Toyota malfunctioning, the complaint would result in little more than the complainer being labeled incompetent; as anyone from service advisors, CR and ambulance chasers "knew" blaming Toyota was a losing bet. Preventing Toyota corporate from picking up signals decision makers at less exalted makers would be made immediately aware of. And now, things have turned around 180, to the point where if some drunk rams into a daycare center, the main focus of the ensuing story is what part of his Toyota malfunctioned this time.

  • ToolGuy Good for them.
  • ToolGuy "I'm an excellent driver."
  • Tassos If a friend who does not care about cars asks me what to buy, I tell her (it usually is a she) to get a Toyota or a Lexus. If she likes more sporty cars, a Honda or a MiataIf a friend is a car nut, they usually know what they want and need no help. But if they still ask me, I tell them to get a Merc or AMG, a 911, even an M3 if they can fix it themselves. If they are billionaires, and I Do have a couple of these, a Ferrari or an even more impractical Lambo.
  • ToolGuy Good for them, good for me.
  • Tassos While I have been a very satisfied Accord Coupe and CIvic Hatch (both 5-speed) owner for decades (1994-2017 and 1991-2016 respectively), Honda has made a ton of errors later.Its EVs are GM clones. That alone is sufficient for them to sink like a stone. They will bleed billions, and will take them from the billions they make of the Civic, Accord, CRV and Pilot.Its other EVs will be overpriced as most Hondas, and few will buy them. I'd put my money on TOyota and his Hybrid and Plug-in strategy, until breaktrhus significantly improve EVs price and ease of use, so that anybody can have an EV as one's sole car.
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