The water pump, which cools the hybrid system, not the engine, could be slow to activate. That would raise the hybrid system’s coolant temperature and trip the car’s ‘Check Engine’ light. If the components get too hot, the Prius automatically reduces power to prevent further damage.
Toyota characterizes the recall as a “customer satisfaction campaign”, according to Agence-France Presse. A Toyota spokesman also said the recall was voluntary, not legally required.
While Toyota’s response to this problem appears to be quick and thorough, the company needs to build its cars better the first time around. A continuing pattern of recalls, voluntary or not, could erode Toyota’s quality reputation. The company would do well to remember that its reputation for quality is what helped it pull through the earlier debacle.
Toyota is trying though. On a blog hosted by Consumer Reports magazine, a reader noted that Toyota is repaying him the $500 he spent to have this problem fixed last summer. “I am very happy,” he reports.
Toyota needs that kind of response from its customers. And what it needs even more is sharper focus on quality as its cars leave the factory.
Paul Ausick