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Trying to shed more light on the cause of sudden acceleration, Edmunds.com (which "lists new car prices, used car prices, car comparisons, car buying advice, car ratings, car values, auto leasing") is offering $1 million to anyone who, under controlled conditions, can "re-create unintended acceleration in a car and then solve that problem and prove the whole thing" to the company, its CEO announced yesterday. The LA Times reports that the competition will begin next month after the details are worked out.
Who says it's a coding error? why not random corruption of a system from stray RF noise from a passing transmitter or a random thermal effect degrading a signal path or other such random things.Anyhow... they not asking to find cause of bug be it a piece of code or what ever, they are asking for the test environment where the symptoms of the bug can replicated on demand. You *could* hit upon that without looking at one scrap of decompiled code but it might cost more that the 'prize' money to set up for it if seriously going to have a stab at it... but ya be famous.
Far more compliacted than that,Pot on the top of the throttle pedal sends a reading to the EUC.
Quote from: dxmedia on March 09, 2010, 11:15:27Far more compliacted than that,Pot on the top of the throttle pedal sends a reading to the EUC.Oh I know how complicated Electronic Engine Management systems are, I used to work on them in development when I worked for Ford. All I can say about that is if it had a Blue Oval, this wouldn't have happened. They test things to death.Then they pay engineers to drive them to death, if anything nasty shows up they test it some more.They also have one of the most advanced EEM systems in the industry, so good it has been used by F1 teams.the software "fix" might indicate a probelm in the original software, or it's a safety net for a number of other possible causes. I'm surprised that applying the brake doesn't cut the throttle like it does on the Passat for example. Maybe it does now.
As for stray RF affecting the car this is not a possibility as all vehicles now are rigorously tested for all bands of RF for interference. If there is an interference then the car is not classed as passed and thus can't be sold to the public.
Are cosmic rays really causing Toyota's woes?WASHINGTON – It may sound far-fetched, but federal regulators are studying whether sudden acceleration in Toyotas is linked to cosmic rays.http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/classifieds/news/automotive/latestnews/stories/DN-detroit_21bus.ART.State.Edition1.3db2cdb.html