Toyota recalling Sequoia/Tundra regarding balljoints/suspensions
Can someone paste the whole page rather than having to click on the link?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070119/.../toyota_recall
Can someone paste the whole page rather than having to click on the link?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070119/.../toyota_recall
This might look bad, but Toyota's recalls are on track to drop, and it seems like Toyota is recalling cars for just about every problem it can find. This has less to do with Toyota being forced by the NHTSA or lawsuits to conduct a recall like some other automakers often are, and it has more to do with them recalling for as many potential problems or on-going problems they can find.
Toyota seems even more paranoid about quality now, and to elevate it's quality reputation higher than ever before. Toyota is taking it's time on several new or redesigned models to ensure quality is top-notch. The auto industry could definitely use a bit of a break from Toyota and it's relentless competitiveness.
The automaker said there was a possibility of excessive wear to a front suspension lower ball joint that could make it difficult to steer the vehicle and stay in the center of the lane. Drivers may also notice more noise coming from the front suspension, Kwong said.
Kwong said the company received additional complaints involving newer models of the Tundra and Sequoia, prompting them to issue the recall.
This may be what caused the accidents, which is a little more involved than the PR guy's comments of difficulty steering. Does anyone yet know what the fix is?
Summary:
2006 TOYOTA TUNDRA - BALL JOINT FAILURE CAUSING BALL JOINT TO BREAK AND WHEEL TO COME OFF. THIS ALSO DAMAGES THE FENDER ON WHICH EVER SIDE THE BALL JOINT BREAKS. TOYOTA ADDED MORE BOLTS AND PIECES TO THE BALL JOINT BUT IT DIDN'T MAKE THE JOINT STRONGER AND COULD HAPPEN QUIET FREQUENTLY UNTIL THE PROBLEM IS RESOLVED BY TOYOTA. IT STARTS WITH THE STEERING BECOMING HARD TO HANDLE AND THEN ALL OF A SUDDEN YOUR WHEEL FALLS OFF. THANKFULLY WE WERE IN A PARKING LOT WHEN THIS HAPPENED AND NOT GOING VERY FAST. *JB
http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/cars/pr...aintsearch.cfm
Make:
TOYOTA
Model:
TUNDRA
Year:
2006
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This might look bad, but Toyota's recalls are on track to drop, and it seems like Toyota is recalling cars for just about every problem it can find. This has less to do with Toyota being forced by the NHTSA or lawsuits to conduct a recall like some other automakers often are, and it has more to do with them recalling for as many potential problems or on-going problems they can find.
Toyota seems even more paranoid about quality now, and to elevate it's quality reputation higher than ever before. Toyota is taking it's time on several new or redesigned models to ensure quality is top-notch. The auto industry could definitely use a bit of a break from Toyota and it's relentless competitiveness.
People won't be thrilled at all to discover their wheel could fall off or with just the hassle of going through a recall.
I am happy it seems nobody was killed and I HOPE the injuries indicated were minor.
And further hope the gentleman who strted this thread is mistaken about this being something affecting the GS owners.
Celebrating Lexus & Toyota from Around the Globe
Quality always loses out to quantity. In addition cars start to share more components and look more alike.
People won't be thrilled at all to discover their wheel could fall off or with just the hassle of going through a recall.
I am happy it seems nobody was killed and I HOPE the injuries indicated were minor.
And further hope the gentleman who strted this thread is mistaken about this being something affecting the GS owners.
p.s.
Recalls in 2006:
Chrysler #1 with 2.3 million vehicles
Ford #2 with 1.7 million vehicles
GM #3 nearly 1.4 million
Nissan #4 1.3 million cars
Toyota recalled 814,507 vehicles in
2006 by NHTSA's data, nearly two-thirds less than a year earlier.
just to put things into perspective here...
p.s.
Recalls in 2006:
Chrysler #1 with 2.3 million vehicles
Ford #2 with 1.7 million vehicles
GM #3 nearly 1.4 million
Nissan #4 1.3 million cars
Toyota recalled 814,507 vehicles in
2006 by NHTSA's data, nearly two-thirds less than a year earlier.
just to put things into perspective here...
Toyota has over 9 million the last three years which averages out to 3 million per year. However, I am not sure of Chryslers past few years. They could be higher.
http://www.businessweek.com/autos/co...tos+index+page
Last edited by sdbrandon; Jan 19, 2007 at 02:18 PM.
http://www.businessweek.com/autos/co...tos+index+page
yr MFG Affected
2000 Ford 7,091,466
2000 Chrysler6,700,198
2000 GM 5,671,382
2000 Nissan 449,668
2000 Honda 425,948
2000 Toyota 24,851
yr MFG Affected
2001 Ford 6,032,054
2001 Chrysler2,609,345
2001 GM 2,495,884
2001 Nissan 453,015
2001 Honda 290,193
2001 Toyota 158,259
yr MFG Affected
2002 Chrysler6,413,130
2002 GM 4,554,046
2002 Ford 2,322,197
2002 Honda 1,080,620
2002 Nissan 646,298
2002 Toyota 496,389
yr MFG Affected
2003 GM 7,158,299
2003 Ford 3,409,077
2003 Chrysler2,059,277
2003 Nissan 1,995,524
2003 Honda 910,732
2003 Toyota 212,252
yr MFG Affected
2004 GM 10,734,790
2004 Chrysler5,819,380
2004 Ford 5,035,596
2004 Honda 2,135,070
2004 Toyota 1,132,334
2004 Nissan 723,891
yr MFG Affected
2005 Ford 6,005,309
2005 GM 4,998,181
2005 Toyota 2,374,162
2005 Chrysler765,777
2005 Honda 730,042
2005 Nissan 709,838
When you say 9 million over last 3 years, thats worldwide number, not US number...
GM: 17,1
Ford: 12.7
Chrysler: 8.8
Toyota: 4.2 mil
Honda: 3
Nissan: 2,7
If we make it 5 years, Toyota ranks lowest of top 6 manufacturers in the USA.
Just to put things into perspective, since lots of people tend to post crazy numbers.








