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Or How My Love Affair With My ACURA Legend Came
To An Unhappy End...
Up
until November of 1999 I would have said to anyone who asked, even to
people who didn't ask, that I loved my car. With the exception of the
over $2K I spent fixing the rust on it and the frequent replacement of
those damn Michelin tires, it had been very affordable to maintain by
my local mechanic (with the exception of about $2500 that I blew up at
the Acura dealership doing basic maintenance and replacing the fuel pan
etc.).I had bought this car used with 105K miles on it and it had served
me well. Up to that point my main requirement for a car was that it started
whenever I wanted to go somewhere. This car far exceeded my expectations:
it was comfortable with leather seats and I could open the sunroof in
the summer and it looked great.
However, on November 29 all that changed. I had already owned my car for
4-5 years. I had been driving for 32 years..no accidents or speeding/traffic
violations. I was in a Dunkin Donuts parking lot. I was driving my son
to the airport after Thanksgiving. My husband was in the back seat. I
went in to get us some coffee. When I came out, my son had the trunk open
to get something out of his suitcase. Unfortunately he dropped the key.
So I said, "Just wait until I back the car out and you can look to
see if it fell under the car." I got in, put my foot on the brake
and shifted out of Park. The engine made a loud revving noise and the
car shot backward. Pumping the brake had no effect at all and I smashed
into another car. The only way to stop the car was to turn off the ignition.
Sounds
fishy, right? The police who came certainly gave that impression. They
said they had never heard of such a thing. Well I knew that it had happened.
Both my son and my husband heard the engine rev when the gears were shifted.
So I did some research on the web and found my way to the
NHTSA web site (National Highway and Traffic Safety). I did a search
of their online database for safety reports on the Acura Legend 1988.
I printed out 50 pages on my car and two thirds were reports of exactly
the same thing that I experienced...sudden acceleration when shifting
out of Park. There were so many reports in the first two years that the
car was on the road that the NHTSA opened an investigation. After two
years the investigation was closed because they could not reproduce the
problem and could not figure out what would make the car behave like that
other than driver error. There were at least two deaths documented and
a multitude of injured people.
There
are still a lot of these cars out there. My car is sitting in my driveway
right now and has been since I got it back from the body shop almost 4
months ago. I could not in good conscience sell it to anyone until I know
that whatever caused the problem is repaired. Acura reps have denied any
knowledge of such a problem (yet Acura engineers were consulted for the
NHTSA report).
I
would not ever want to find myself in such a situation again, shooting
backward in an out-of-control vehicle, powerless to stop it. Imagine if
a person had been walking across that parking lot, or if I was in my own
driveway and a neighbor's child was going by. It is a horrifying thought
and I cannot believe that nothing has been done to alert people to this
problem. If you own an Acura Legend '88 or are considering buying a used
one, please do
the research yourself. In fact, the other day I saw a car in a parking
lot exactly like mine, except it had a baby seat in the back. Think about
that...
Then
think about why
the car is still on the road, in spite of numerous reports and an
investigation. Acura maintains that there are no conditions under which
the engine can override the brakes, if the brakes are in working order.
The NHTSA concluded that it must be driver error...drivers were shifting
with their foot on the accelerator instead of the brake. Subsequently
cars were designed with shift locks so it was impossible to shift without
your foot on the brake.
Yet
many of the drivers involved were experienced drivers like myself. Think
about it. The brake is a wide pedal, higher than the accelerator. There
is a completely different feeling when you put your foot on the brake.
And when you press down on the accelerator or lift your foot off, the
car changes speed.
So
what now? Acura claims ignorance. The car isn't worth a lot...maybe a
few thousand dollars but that is a lot to me at the moment and so I am
just doing without a car because I can't afford to junk it and buy one
that isn't a lethal weapon. Do you ever get the feeling that consumers
get the short end? And what about the people who were killed by these
cars? The more research I do the more horrified I am. If you have anything
to add to my research, please email
me.
[UPDATE:
Since putting up this site, I have contacted the engineer at NHTSA who
investigated and wrote the report on sudden acceleration in the early
90s. His bottom line response to me was that they didn't find any one
component that might be responsible and that he could not tell me the
problem does not exist or that my car would not do the exact same thing
again. My car is still sitting in my driveway and I'm getting tired of
not having wheels.]
This
site was Protest Site of the Day on
Consumerama on April
21, 2000
Copyright
2000-2002 Catherine E. Smith
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Excerpts
from the NHTSA
Office of Defects Investigation Complaints Database:
Friday,
June 06, 1997:
"THE CAR WAS IN REVERSE AND THEN IT ACCELERATED, AND THE CAR WENT UP
IN THE AIR AND OVER A STONE WALL. THE CAR HAS BEEN TOTALED."
Friday,
February 06, 1998:
"CONSUMER STARTED VEHICLE UP AND PUT VEHICLE IN REVERSE, VEHICLE ACCELERATED
IN HIGH SPEED. CONSUMER APPLIED THE BRAKES, AND VEHICLE DIDN'T STOP. "
Saturday,
May 10, 1997:
"DRIVER ENTERED VEHICLE, RELEASED PARKING BRAKE AND PUT TRANSMISSION
INTO DRIVE, VEHICLE SUDDENLY ACCELERATED OUT OF CONTROL, RESULTING IN A
COLLISION/INJURIES."
Wednesday,
June 26, 1996:
"SUDDEN ACCELERATION, CAUSING ACCIDENT/INJURIES."
NO. OF INJURIES: 4 Saturday,
December 17, 1994:
"BACKING OUT OF DRIVEWAY VEHICLE ACCELERATED ALSO COMING OFF HIGHWAY
VEHICLE SURGED FORWARD."
Tuesday,
October 11, 1994:
"BACKING OUT OF DRIVEWAY VEHICLE SURGED REARWARD. "
Saturday,
August 13, 1994:
"SUDDEN ACCELERATION, RESULTED IN LOSS OF CONTROL/ACCIDENT/INJURY"
NO. OF INJURIES: 1
Tuesday,
November 16, 1993:
"VEHICLE WAS PARKED, THEN PUT INTO REVERSE, VEHICLE SURGED FORWARD
WITH HIGH IDLE, EXPERIENCED SUDDEN ACCELERATION, LOST CONTROL, IMPACT 6:00
POSITION."
NO. OF INJURIES: 2
Wednesday,
October 13, 1993:
"WHILE STOPPED FOR GAS, BRAKES APPLIED, SHIFTED FROM PARK TO DRIVE,
ACCELERATOR FULLY ENGAGED, CAUSED ACCIDENT. AIR BAG DEPLOYED."
NO. OF INJURIES: 1
Sunday,
April 25, 1993:
"CAR WAS TAKEN OUT OF GARAGE PUT IN NEUTRAL, IT TOOK OFF BY ITSELF
AND HIT A WALL. ALSO, DRIVER'S AIRBAG DEPLOYED."
NO. OF INJURIES: 1
Wednesday,
September 30, 1992:
"OUT OF PARK POSITION VEHICLE SUDDENLY ACCELERATED, JUMPED CURB AND
HIT ANOTHER CAR, BRAKES WERE INEFFECTIVE, NOTICED GEAR WAS IN NEUTRAL UPON
STOPPING. "
Thursday,
September 24, 1992:
"WHILE BACKING OUT OF PARKING LOT ENGINE ACCELERATED IN REVERSE AT
A HIGH RATE OF SPEED; DID NOT STOP W/BRAKES AND EMERGENCY BRAKES APPLIED;
HIT A PARKED CAR. "
Saturday,
April 25, 1992:
"VEHICLE SUDDENLY ACCELERATED IN REVERSE, LOST CONTROL AND HIT A HOUSE."
NO. OF INJURIES: 1
Thursday,
March 19, 1992:
"STARTED TO TURN AROUND IN A DRIVEWAY, PUT GEAR IN REVERSE AND FOOT
ON BRAKE, VEHICLE SUDDENLY ACCELERATED OUT OF CONTROL, HIT SIDE OF FRIEND'S
GARAGE."
Monday,
July 29, 1991:
"STARTED VEHICLE AND SHIFTED GEAR INTO REVERSE, VEHICLE SUDDENLY ACCELERATED
OUT OF CONTROL, HITTING A BUILDING."
NO. OF INJURIES: 2
Friday,
November 24, 1989:
"WHEN SHIFTED FROM PARK TO REVERSE CAR SUDDENLY ACCELERATED INTO PEDESTRIAN
AND KILLED."
NO. OF INJURIES: 1 |