Archive for March 8th, 2010

Report: ABC News faked at least one part of runaway Toyota report

Filed under: Recalls, Safety, Toyota

Late last month we wrote a lengthy post about problems with an ABC News report that purported to show a Toyota Avalon racing out of control without setting a diagnostic fault code. While we primarily focused on the technical side and analyzed whether the problem was realistic, the crew at Gawker took a hard look at the video in question and noticed something fishy.

It appears that an editor or producer at ABC felt they could pull a fast one on the audience and used some B-roll in the report showing the tachometer needle sweeping rapidly from near idle to over 6,000 rpm. That clip was injected at the precise moment when David Gilbert triggered his simulated sudden acceleration. As you can see from the screen cap above, the shot of the tachometer clearly shows the warning lights for the parking brake on, the doors open and the transmission indicator in park. The camera operator shot this segment separately so it could be used to illustrate a point in the report, and ABC claims that getting a steady shot during the test would’ve been both difficult and dangerous.

The B-roll shot doesn’t indicate anything conclusive one way or the other about the validity of the test and certainly doesn’t stand as proof of anything being rigged. However, the lack of transparency by ABC and Mr. Gilbert regarding the specific procedure doesn’t add to the credibility of either the claims or the report, and the lack of clarity by Toyota in its response to Gilbert’s assertions doesn’t do the automaker any favors, either.

[Source: Gawker]


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Report: ABC News faked at least one part of runaway Toyota report originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 08 Mar 2010 09:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AutoblogGreen for 03.08.10

Toyota joins Clean Energy Partnership, helps build new H2 stations
That makes five more hydrogen vehicles in Europe.
Update on the CMT-380 microturbine hybrid sports car
It’s really too bad this thing isn’t in production today.
Report: Shell CEO expects plug-in cars to reach 40% market share… in 2050
Who’s going to prove him wrong?
Other news:

AutoblogGreen for 03.08.10 originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 08 Mar 2010 05:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Goes a Long Way To Make Friends [Moment Of Zen]

Check out those whitewalls!


This 1947 magazine ad for the General Squeegee has it all: beach babes, a mint-green postwar Detroit bomb parked in the sand, and the craziest-looking tires we’ve ever seen. Dig those parallel-groove treads and optical-illusion shoulders, cats!



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Video: Scott Wade’s dirty car art and how it’s done

Filed under: Etc., Videos

Scott Wade’s dirty car art – Click above to watch video after the jump

If you were to research all of the posts ever published on Autoblog, you’d find that one of the most popular was one published back in June 2006 about artist Scott Wade from San Marcos, Texas. Wade is a painter who, unlike his peers, uses dirty cars as his canvas. He turns dusty rear windows into masterpieces that only last as long as a stiff breeze or unannounced rain shower allows.

At the time, we didn’t know much about how Wade created his art other than that typical artists’ tools like paint brushes were used. We recently found this video on YouTube created in January of this year, that details exactly how these amazing images are created.

Surprisingly, Wade first has to clean the rear window of the car he’s working on. He then applies almond oil to the glass so the special dust he uses, the same kind of fake dust used in the movies, will stick better. The dust is applied using a hair dryer to blow it onto the glass, and once an even and opaque coating has been achieved, he goes to work with his paint brushes. A complete piece of dirty rear glass art takes about 2-4 hours to complete, after which it’s either washed off or left to naturally decay on its own, which will happen fast.

Take a look at the video after the jump and revisit our gallery of past pieces by Scott Wade in the gallery below.

Continue reading Video: Scott Wade’s dirty car art and how it’s done

Video: Scott Wade’s dirty car art and how it’s done originally appeared on Autoblog on Sun, 07 Mar 2010 17:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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And the Real Winner Is… [24 Hours Of Lemons]

This was by far the easiest Index of Effluency decision in the history of the 24 Hours of LeMons.

The Team Air Prance Schitroën Citroën DS was purchased for 300 bucks not long before the race. It had been sitting for 20+ years, which would be a challenge for a Dodge Dart but is utter lunacy for a vehicle as complex and with as many hydraulic fittings and seals as a DS. The team thrashed on it in a panic for weeks prior to the race and got it 95% ready by the weekend, but it had still not driven under its own power since the 1980s as of Friday afternoon. Then, success! It started and drove a single lap around the paddock.

You know how this story ends, right? Saturday morning, the Citroën hits the track… and shoots a rod through the hood within 200 yards. Mais non! Pas du tout! It had to pit a couple of times for brief repairs and adjustments, but otherwise spent the entire weekend going around and around and around Infineon Raceway. It is impossible to overstate the magnitude of this accomplishment, folks. Congratulations to our first-ever two-time Index of Effluency winner. First with a ’62 Mini, now with a ’72 Citroën!



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