Too Good To Be True: How Toyota's Success Caused Killer Decontenting

The ongoing kerfluffle over Toyota’s recall of over 2m vehicles for a gas pedal defect which (allegedly) caused unintended acceleration has caught much of the automotive media flat-footed. How could it be, many have wondered, that the automaker most associated in the US market with the concept of quality has slipped so badly? As TTAC’s Steve Lang recently discussed, Toyota has been on a decontenting binge since the mid-to-late-1990s, putting profit above the quality obsession that had defined its operations up to that point. As a result, the current generation of decontented Toyotas and accompanying quality issues and recalls can be seen as the culmination of a long-term trend. But why did that transition take place? Though it’s easy to blame greed and mismanagement for the decline in Toyota’s quality, the decline in standards was actually a natural progression of Toyota’s constantly-evolving, efficiency-obsessed production system.

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  • SCE to AUX I don't really understand what this money does, but if it's for The Children, then I'm all for it.
  • Redapple2 Super looking. 4000lbs and $75,000 out the door and i d be tempted.
  • SCE to AUX Agree 100%.But I'm not sure how rare false positives are. My rental Model 3 hit the brakes twice during the week I had it - very unnerving at highway speeds. I think I disabled it once I found the setting inside the terrible menu system.Even my Santa Fe had this problem in stop-and-go traffic, and I disabled it.So what's the benefit of a poor driving aid that makes people want to disable it?
  • Mike Beranek No interior pictures usually means that the interior looks like death warmed over.
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X Oof. (again)Not looking good.