REPORT: Toyota may ’shorten’ gas pedals to fix unintended acceleration issue

by Chris Shunk on November 19, 2009

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The Toyota “unintended acceleration” issue has been a hot-button topic for nearly two months, with the Japanese automaker working closely with the National Highway Traffic Safety Association to come up with a permanent solution to the growing problem. Toyota recently published a statement to address the issue, stating it would “take a closer look at the potential for an accelerator pedal to get stuck in the full open position due to an unsecured or incompatible driver’s floor mat.”

Inside Line and Kyodo News are reporting that Toyota may be close to announcing that they will shorten the gas pedal of the four million vehicles affected by the recall.

The alleged fix would be performed by Toyota dealership employees at no charge to the customer. The report doesn’t mention whether the floor mats would be secured in addition to the pedal shortening, but we’re assuming Toyota and Lexus dealers will kill two birds with one stone. Swapping out four million accelerator pedals will probably be a pricey endeavor, but Toyota claims it has saved up $5.6 billion over the years in its recall kitty for just such a rainy day.

[Source: Inside Line]

REPORT: Toyota may ’shorten’ gas pedals to fix unintended acceleration issue originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 19 Nov 2009 09:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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