Just what was Gilbert pedaling?

For us old war dogs of the car safety wars, there were few surprises in the opening round of Congressional hearings today about alleged Toyota safety problems.

Certainly, the predictable appearance of a “surprise” adversarial witness, Professor David W. Gilbert of Southern Illinois University, should have come as no political  game upset, especially since it was telegraphed the night before by his appearance on ratings-driven ABC Television.

Gilbert, who is listed on the SIU website as an associate professor in the Department of Automotive Technology, College of Applied Science and Arts of the Carbondale campus, excoriated Toyota’s design of its electronic throttle mechanism. He claimed to have tricked the system into demonstrating the possibility of runaway acceleration from a simple short circuit.

Toyota denied his claim. No surprise in the denial—what other response could they make?

I think Gilbert is taking on a big load, challenging the expertise of veteran Toyota engineers – and perhaps that of suppliers as well.

He may be right – but if he is wrong – it could be a maliciously staged bit of mischief by ABC-TV or – who knows what?

It would not be the first time that a network TV news department has participated in tests or interviews intended to embarrass and otherwise harm an auto company. Anybody remember the rigged fuel tank fire in a GM pickup truck a few years ago that cost the head of NBC news his job?  

One wonders just how Gilbert came to testify before this Congressional Committee?

  • Has he been a professional witness in lawsuits against auto companies?
  • How solid are his credentials?
  • Is it possible he had help on his testimony from a third party with commercial interest in the outcome of Toyota’s discomfort?

These are questions needing answers as the Toyota controversy continues. But don’t look for pandering politicians to provide them.

We have just learned that Gilbert is connected with professional witness – for profit, of course – Sean Kane,  recognized by some as a safety gadfly successor to Ralph Nader.

The irony is, of course, that it is doubtful if anyone in the Committee Hearing room had the foggiest idea about what Gilbert testified – other than it made Toyota look bad – especially the congresspersons in attendance, who are up for reelection, and the members of the news media honing their knives.

The testimony was larded with acronyms (“ETC” for electronic throttle control was the least of them) requiring even a careful and fairly knowledgeable reader to search for clarifications.

On the other hand, suppose Gilbert is correct that there is a hidden defect, one that Toyota didn’t anticipate in the way its engineers designed the EDC system?

Or worse yet, that they did anticipate, but did not make it “fool proof.”

I’m more than bothered by the fact Toyota chose to cut corners on its “black box” Electronic Data Recorders (EDRs), by not matching the depth of recorded data that GM and Ford have had in their black boxes for years.

Black box data is critically important in reconstructing crashes to determine causes.

What could possibly be Toyota’s motive for going cheap on this?

Don't miss out!
Get Email Alerts
Receive the latest Automotive News in your Inbox!
Invalid email address
Give it a try. You can unsubscribe at any time.