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On Sat, 14 Oct 2006 01:53:03 GMT, Tom Francis wrote:
On Sat, 14 Oct 2006 01:32:38 GMT, Don White wrote: Bert Robbins wrote: Eisboch wrote: "Don White" wrote in message ... I suscribe to Consumer Reports and the main Toyota vehicles i would be interested in are always at the top of the pack. that is.. Sienna, Tundra, Corolla, Highlander, RAV4 and I expect the new RAV6 Consumer Reports has a "thing" with Toyota and has for years. Wasn't Consumer Reports involved in a little problem with selling ratings or some other unethical practices a few years ago? Bull****! No, Bert's right, but I think it was related to their methodology in some fashion. I seem to remember that there was a issue with working with "purchased" cars that had been "tweaked" by engineers rather than just walking into a show room and saying "we'll take that one" kind of a thing. It was a while back when it happened - maybe ten/twelve years ago or so? It wasn't a major issue - a kind of kerfuffle really over what was a minor detail. I do know that they seem to have a bias towards certain types of cars and manufacturers. They now buy their test vehicles off the lot just as you or I would, according to them anyway. I would imagine they get watched pretty closely. They seem biased towards Toyota, Honda, VW (the Passat, anyway), and a few others who always seem to have vehicles in the top ten. Lately a Buick made the top ten, a first (for many years anyway) for an American sedan. It could be they're biased towards cars that perform well and are reliable. |
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