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Toyota

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Growing up in Michigan, one of my first memories is my father traveling to Japan and returning with a bounty of exotic goods  — a rice painting for my mother and a red and blue silk kimono for me.  A few weeks later, a group of Japanese businessmen who worked for Mitsubishi came for dinner. They were working with Chrysler engineers on a project and there was a cultural exchange in the process. I remember the businessman as polite and they seemed to enjoy the American meal my mother prepared.  It was my first brush with Japanese culture growing up in Michigan, and my curiosity was piqued.

When I was in elementary school, Toyota brought a group of families to a nearby neighborhood, and as a result a flood of Japanese children came to my elementary school. I made friends with a fourth-grade Japanese girl who introduced me to the entire Hello Kitty lineup and who wrote notes with delicate penmanship. We learned much from each other, in the way that children do, without judgment or bias, unaware of the resentments building around us as Michigan jealously looked on at the Japanese car economy.  We stayed in touch when she went back to Japan.

At that time, the Big Three companies were struggling to find their place with the emerging power players in Asia — Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Mitsubishi, Subaru and Mazda.   The hardcore Detroiters felt that the Japanese had stolen business, but in reality, it was American companies that had lost that business to Toyota and Honda as the perception of American quality declined. In the 1986 Ron Howard film Gung Ho, Michael Keaton portrayed the frustration of the every man autoworker. It was reported in a 2007 Business Week article that Toyota executives used this film as a guideline for how not to manage American workers.  But when Americans car companies lost their customer, it was the employees who were angered, not the car-buying public. Sales showed that when it comes to buying American, the loyalty ends with Levis. For American buyers, U.S. executives became the trusted face of Toyota, as quality became paramount.

Yet, what’s most interesting about the recent troubles fallen upon Toyota’s quality department is that history indeed repeats itself.  Toyota has fallen prey to the same factors that dulled GM, Ford and Chrysler — growth that surpasses the ability to maintain standards. In the coming days Toyota will scramble to pick up and dust off it’s tarnished reputation, but if history is to be learned from, this lesson won’t come without painful side effects. The flurry of reports and the unmanaged messages coming from CEO Akio Toyoda will cause just as much damage as the actual problems facing the unsafe vehicles.  For Toyota the headache is two fold knocking out its most popular vehicles, and magnified in the brake problem in the Prius, Toyota’s symbolic leading vehicle of green innovation.  Experts are estimating the blow could cost 100,000 in vehicle sales according to CNN report. But without a united front of trust and swift moves to effectively demonstrate a recall, fickle consumer losses are hard to anticipate. Soon, top PR firms will take over this job and mitigate the damage, but the waters will be tricky if Toyota doesn’t stop and pay heed.

Toyota finds itself in unfamiliar territory — how to handle a crises in American confidence.  The company must look toward the past of American companies bitter battles with public perception. The most famous example — the 100-year relationship between Ford and Bridgestone/Firestone that was obliterated by the 1990 Ford Explorer tire controversy, and what Ford has spent much of the past two decades fighting to overcome.  In similar reports to the Toyota issue, it seems that company officials had some knowledge of a safety problem, but failed to address it, and instead got into  a blame game.  This was the final blow to American perception, though American cars did not lose their luster overnight.  They began to lose some of their sturdy quality marks in the early 70s with Chevy Vegas and Ford Pintos tainting their steadfast reputations.

Toyota can come back with swift moves to demonstrate a grasp of its’ manufacturing snafoos, but in this day and age of instant reaction, it doesn’t take much to taint American consumers.  Just as Americans felt no ill will about deserting their own, they certainly won’t with Toyota and Lexus.  Inevitably, this problem will trickle over into perceptions of other Japanese automakers, who could get caught in the friendly fire of stereotyping.

What remains for certain — with Ford  ( referred to in jest as “Fix Or Repair Daily” by American-car haters in past years) grabbing top-quality marks,  GM slowly earning more favorable remarks in its leaner product ine and Hyundai emerging as the luxury marque to beat, nothing about the car business is set in steel.

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Detroit producer Nick Speed courtesy of Detroitrap.com

I edged the nose of the new Toyota Prius to turn onto the busy thoroughfare. I felt small and insignificant.  No one could hear me, quiet as a church mouse with the super silent engine. I prayed no one whizzed by and missed me as I leaped forward into the blind spot. And on a few separate occasions, one of our test car drivers left a quiet hybrid running. He couldn’t hear it. Hence the latest quagmire of new technology — the too silent engine. For years, car companies have thrown money into making quieter luxury cars, and now that hybrid and electric engines have achieved that goal it’s back to the drawing board.

The New York Times reported on a precarious side effect of the hydrogen-hybrid industry — cars that are too quiet. That got me to thinking after chatting with a New York based music producer friend who works for Sirius/XM — why not produce automotive sounds?  It could be a sample-based MP3. While you may not have the money or gas guzzler conscious to drive a Shelby GT500 or fully-loaded Dodge Ram, you could sound like one. In fact, tuning could become a whole new form of tune. Or perhaps there’s room for customization here –personalized car tunes.  In fact, Henrik Fisker equipped the Fisker Karma with bumper noises quelled from Hollywood sound effect studios.

The article reports that Nissan is also in talks with the film industry on sounds for the Leaf battery-electric vehicle, and Toyota is engaged with the  National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the National Federation of the Blind and the Society of Automotive Engineers on making faux-sounds. “One possibility is choosing your own noise,” said Nathalie Bauters, a spokeswoman for BMW’s Mini division.

The NY Times article also quoted  Toyota spokesman, John Hanson.  “I don’t know of any injuries related to this, but it is a concern. We are moving rapidly toward broader use of electrification in vehicles, and it’s a fact that these cars are very quiet and could pose a risk to unsighted people.”

While Hollywood is one avenue, there’s a quite a few Detroit producers who could reproduce sounds. The only question is, will they need to license the sample? Or will it be a new ProTools option? Perhaps someone should call Detroit producer Nick Speed — Speed knows sounds.

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When it comes to the hybrid game, Toyota leads the pack, and with its latest intro, continues to set the place. The 2010 Toyota Prius is on the prowl, ready to throw a wrench in everyone else’s hybrid game. Put-putting along at low speeds to achieve maximum fuel economy, the Prius takes the hobby to a whole new interactive level, with technology that is accessible and easy to operate, and endless mpg streaming. (We’ve heard 70 mpg rumors, but unfortunately we don’t have the eco-minded patience to achieve such feats in the Gotryke Garage.) We spent a week in the Prius, being regular, which is at the end of the day what most Prius owners will do, averaging about 50 mpg. That means conducting errands in busy traffic, and making cross-town jaunts to art events and practical stops at grocery stores. We even tested the baby seat and stroller component with our starring backseat 1-yr old evaluator. Truth be told, the baby factor sometimes knocks small cars out of the game, with proportions that cancel out the passenger’s hope of leg room. For a small contender, the Prius survived our gear test. So what do we think about the looks and feel?

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It’s a whole new look for the Prius in 2010, but it still looks like, eh, a Prius – a space-age four-door hatchback that seats five people, or three adults and one baby seat. [click to continue…]

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A million years ago when dinosaurs ruled the earth (okay it was the mid- ’90s,) my college boyfriend hosted a radio show on Impact 89FM (shout-out MSU Spartans.) His deep voice and radio persona added considerably to his cool factor for me, a music geek already in the making. It was the era of the mixtape (cassette) in the car stereo, and he consistently delighted me with grand new cuts from bands like the Makeup, or favorite De Le Soul beats and Carl Craig’s latest tracks which were only available on 12″ vinyl back then. My ears wide and open for the next new sound — electronic, indie, hip-hop or otherwise. I was an audiophile sponge, but this boyfriend had taken music obsession to new heights. He was critical, discerning, and passionate. Shows, parties and record stores provided fodder for our musical debates.

He turned me onto all kinds of bands, scouring stacks for undiscovered gems or classics. Yet, a big part of his stash came from the insider vantage point he had at the college radio station, where he heard breaking records, and could spin pretty much what he wanted in his program segment — late night style. This college radio jock story has been repeated and rewound a thousand times over at universities across the country. And then when I set up based in Detroit, it was NPR ala WDET 101.9 at Wayne State University, where I found programming that was stimulating — my kind of talk radio.

Independent radio is the last frontier for breakthrough artists and refreshing news coverage — a perfect audience still searching for the new soundtrack of their youth and willing to test the boundaries on sonic journeys. That’s why this program — Toyota’s Free Yr Radio – caught my eye. Free Yr Radio, is a proven formula witha Broadcast Stage benefitting independent stations at popular festivals and music conferences including All Points West, Outside Lands, Bumbershoot, CMJ and Voodoo Festival.

Over 20 partner stations with tools to increase exposure and listener support, including KEXP (Seattle’s University of Washington radio station), The Current Minnesota Public Radio (Twin Cities, MN), KUSF (The University of San Francisco) and KXLU (Los Angeles broadcasted from Westchester campus of Loyola Marymount University). In the past funds have been raised through Urban Outfitters performances from supporting bands Sonic Youth, No Age, Mudhoney, Dinosaur Jr., King Khan, !!!, Dan Deacon, Grizzly Bear and Yeasayer The Toyota Yaris was in the prize pot for pledges. This fest season, indie stations will pop at festivals with audio captured at these stages distributed freely to the nation’s network of CMJ-reporting indie radio stations.

“Toyota and Free Yr Radio are proud to be a part of the vibrancy and energy of the music festivals and the ongoing support of indie radio stations and their fans,” Keith Dahl, Toyota National Manager of Engagement Marketing said. “This year we are going beyond the walls of intimate venues and broadcasting these interviews and performances to everyone.”

Free Yr Radio will donate to each festival partner station with further fund raising opportunities provided in on-site activities at the festival such as a photo booth Corolla, and a Shrinky Dink wearable art station.
Here’s the schedule with our recommendations bolded for the stage at this weekend’s All Points Festival where Jay-Z is the big headliner: [click to continue…]

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img_1910_2The 2009 New York Auto Show will grab the public eye starting Wednesday, but for the automotive insiders, the action kicked off Tuesday night. We hit the pre-show events spending time with executives from Audi, Nissan, Toyota, and Volvo, catching up on product news and the realities of the tenuous market place, and we even saw a few cars along the way – such as the Audi Q5 TDI– the newest diesel to go streetside next month. Stay tuned for live auto show coverage on Twitter and Gotryke.com all week long.

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Lately, I’ve been running into a lot of bikers in various stages of their career. Getting to the track is paramount for these guys and ladies. I imaging they’ll be excited by the unveiling of the Ducati track day transporter, which is the result of a Toyota and Ducati collaboration. Every hobby and sport has its extras, and what makes this new equipment stand out is flip up bedsides, a motorized loading ramp by Rampage, tool and spares storage, and my personal favorite — pop up solar panels for accessory power. The transporter was unveiled at the SEMA hubub last week.

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If you happen to be in the New York streets Wednesday morning, you may notice ten hydrogen-powered cars rolling by Central Park. It’s part of the 12-day 4000 mile Hydrogen Road Tour, headed for the next stop at Liberty Science Tour, and then onto Washington, D.C.. The tour began on Monday, August 11 in Portland, Maine and ends in Santa Monica, California on August 23. The forces behind the sustainable tour include the U.S. Departments of Energy and Transportation in partnership with the California Fuel Cell Partnership and the National Hydrogen Association. It’s about spreading the word and potential of hydrogen — although widespread use of the fuel is still several years out. And the cars? BMW Hydrogen 7, Daimler F-Cell, GM’s Chevy Equinox FCV, Honda FCX Clarity, Hyundai Tuscon FCV, Kia Sportage FCV, Nissan X Trail FCV, Toyota Highlander FCHV, and Volkswagen’s Touran and Tiguan HyMotion . Everybody’s gotta start somewhere.


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