Accumulator
Well-known member
yakky said:I am very disappointed in Toyota ... how about educating the consumer as to what to do in the event that the accelerator does stick.
Eh, throttles have stuck on [all sorts of vehicles] since forever. First time I witnessed it was when I was a little kid in the '60s, and my mother just *dealt with it*, immediately and correctly, no problem. The elderly lady I got my '93 Audi from put up with its sticking throttle for years; it finally spooked *me* enough that we had it fixed, but she didn't think it was any big deal.
So I wouldn't have thought there'd be a special need to educate people about what I'd consider intuitively obvious. Guess that's another reason why nobody'd want *me* running the world

I guess Toyota oughta have something in the owner's manual about this, just like they tell ya how to fasten the seatbelts..eh, *every* owner's manual should have such stuff in it, but I bet the people who need to be told how to deal with it won't learn from the manual anyhow.
Now that the issue has everyone's attention, I wonder if all the "how to deal" stuff I'm seeing on TV will sink in. People don't always do the right thing at the right time, even when they know what that "right thing" is.
The hardest thing for me to swallow was the CHP officer that several people in the car AND time to call 911, but couldn't do anything to stop the car otherwise?
Sheesh..."emergency situation, seconds count, what to do?!?" "Oh, yeah, I'll call for help!"

IMO this is just bringing to light that people who aren't qualified to operate motor vehicles do it every day. Driving is the only life-and-death serious thing, where correct, split-second responses can really matter, that most people do on a regular basis. But people don't take it seriously.
I find that scarier than runaway Toyotas, not that *that* isn't a very serious problem.
[Accumulator sheepishly climbs down off his soapbox
