I used to sell Toyota'a and I love they way they recall products.Unlike other manufacturers they are very quick to recall their products before several people are hurt or killed. 99.99% of their recalled vehicles are ok,but they replace the parts anyway. What I loved was that they bring customers back to the dealerships to walk around and look at other Toyota products.
Gary I disagree with you comment:
"Unlike other manufacturers they are very quick to recall their products before several people are hurt or killed."
This is untrue.
The stuck pedals were first blamed on driver error.
Second they were blamed on driver floor matts.
(* They told dealerships to use zip ties and hand cut wholes in the matts. *)
Third it was not until enough complaints were registered with the federal government that the issues were being tracked just like all such issues are tracked for all manufacturers who sell product in the USA. 1% rate is the rate for Federal tracking. 4% is the rate for a Mandatory Recall. No one wants a Mandatory Recall, so all companies issue a recall between the 1% and 4% mark to avoid the negative press from a mandatory recall.
Yes, Toyota has more recalls in recent years, but this has to do with a few things.
The first being volume. There is a threshold within the industry that seems to just have problem with vehicles. The number of vehicles being built, the number of variations all add into the mix. It is always easier to have one model with one variation and make sure that works in all conditions.
The Second is something the general public does not know about and I am sure I would be at risk from CARB (* California Air Resource Board *) and possible even the company I work for by stating the following:
CARB does a 100% inspection of GM as they were the largest seller in the US. Even though Toyota and Honda have sold more than GM for decades in California, they still use the national numbers. The Number two volume nation wide would on average get about 80% inspection over a two year period. The number three would get 60% over a three years from launch of the vehicle of the model year. CARB decided to staff up for National Volume even though they were concerned about local air quality.
Even with Toyota moving into the Number one World Wide they still do not get the same inspection as GM (* Old US Number 1 *) and Ford (* Old US Number 2 *). They are staffed as I stated for these programs. But they have in the last decade began to step up and put more people on the imports for investigation. This stops the "We have a new model that fixes this problem" and CARB moves on lets it go as they were smaller volume.
The issue they found with the Domestics is not an issue finding something not there, they did find things. And they were fixed. But from the 80's on they gave a pass and light inspection to imports. This gave a peception of near perfection that most people today believe.
So, as I stated this has slowly been changing and with further inspection and testing and investigation into these other higher volume US sold products the imports are seeing more issues being tracked by CARB and also EPA and NHTSA. EPA and NHTSA are even less staffed than CARB and follow a lot of what they report or track first. NHTSA does some safety things independantly, but they get a lot of data from state agencies that track compalints and accidents.
As in most things marketing it is all about perception.
NOTE: I did not say the imports had bad product. Only that they are not perfect, just like the Domestics are not perfect either.