This really isn’t a great year for Toyota.
You may be thinking that 1.53 million is a LOT of cars—and it is—but it’s only a fraction of the number of cars that have already been recalled by Toyota this year. More than 10 million cars have been called back for several different possible defects, including gas pedal failure and some brake malfunctions.
What should you do if… Continue reading
When it rains, it pours, I suppose. First Toyota, then Chrysler, and now General Motors is recalling vehicles due to a potential hazard. 1.5 million Vehicles have been recalled because of an issue with the heated washer fluid system. 15 models made between 2006 and 2009 are in danger of catching fire due to the problem.
You may be thinking that this many recalls is extra-ordinary—and you’d be… Continue reading
It seems like 2010 is the year of the recall, first Toyota and now Chrysler. About 600,000 minivans and Jeep Wranglers in the United States have been recalled due to brake and wiring problems.
Some Wranglers produced between 2006-2010 have been reported to have a potential brake fluid leak, while some 2008-2009 Grand Caravans and the Town & Country minivans have been recalled for wiring problems… Continue reading
Sure, you’d have to be living under a rock to have not heard about the Toyota recall. They’ve recalled 8.5 million cars but the car crash deaths continue to be reported. In fact, more than 60 reports have been received about sudden acceleration in cars that have already been fixed. What if you thought your car had been fixed but it was still defective? What if you then suffered an injury, physical or emotional, from an accident? Is your injury settlement in jeopardy? Continue reading
If you own a Toyota, you’ve probably been bombarded with news that your car could be defective. Toyota has hardly left the front page of the news for the last month with stories about sticky gas pedals, defective brake pedals, and more. But what about the rest of us? Are we driving defective cars too? Continue reading
…And we thought General Motors was in trouble. It seems that Toyota’s recall of more than 8.5 million vehicles was just the beginning of the discussion on the brake and acceleration defects on their latest models. Now, stories have started to arrive about car crash deaths, life-changing experiences, and traumatic car accident injuries that have only made matters worse for Toyota. One Tennessee woman has recently come forward to explain her 2006 dance with death as her Toyota made car accelerated to 100 mph as she tried to get it to stop. Continue reading