Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Japan Transportation

Mitsubishi: We've Been Cheating On Fuel Tests For 25 years (cnn.com) 195

An anonymous reader cites an article on CNN:The situation at Mitsubishi Motors just went from bad to much, much worse. The Japanese automaker admitted Tuesday that it had falsified fuel efficiency tests for the past quarter century (warning: annoying autoplay videos, alternate source), the latest revelation in a scandal that has rocked the company. The automaker said last week that it had used improper fuel economy tests on hundreds of thousands of vehicles, including some sold to Nissan. Cars with inflated fuel efficiency ratings were sold only in Japan. Mitsubishi said it would ask lawyers from outside the company to investigate the tests.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Mitsubishi: We've Been Cheating On Fuel Tests For 25 years

Comments Filter:
  • Somebody... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 26, 2016 @11:01AM (#51989695)

    ...will be committing sudoku over this.

  • by dadelbunts ( 1727498 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2016 @11:06AM (#51989751)
    Mitsubishi execs later clarified that they tried to sell said cars in the U.S, but no one bought any.
    • by Phics ( 934282 )

      Except for Chrysler for a bit....

    • by TWX ( 665546 )
      You may jest, but back when Chrysler was very seriously contemplating buying Mitsubishi they shifted badge-engineered production from Asia to North America. All of those Galants and Eclipses were made in the USA in the Diamond-Star Motors plant, along with the two-door versions of the Avenger, Sebring, and Stratus.

      Chrysler eventually did not choose to buy Mitsubishi, and at some later date Mitsubishi bought-out Chrysler's stake in DSM.
    • True, but they sent at least two good ones over here, the first generation (1990-94) Eclipse GSX, all-wheel drive turbo, and the Lancer Evolution also an all-wheel drive turbo tuner edition. The boy racer in me would love to have either. The Eclipse GSX was also imported by Chrysler and rebadged as the Eagle Talon TSI, one of the baddest-ass car names ever, and the car could back it up.

      • GTO VR4 was pretty dank as well. My favorite tho has to be the Starion. One of the best set of OEM wheels ever made on that thing. Shame they ruined the eclipse so soon and we never got the FTO.
      • by cdrudge ( 68377 )

        The Eclipse GSX was also imported by Chrysler and rebadged as the Eagle Talon TSI

        The Plymouth Laser was the 3rd model in the original Diamond Star Motor (DSM) lineup. None of the Eclipses, Talons, or Lasers were imported. They were all assembled in Normal, IL at what was originally a 50-50 joint venture between Mitsubishi and Chrysler. Mitsubishi later bought out Chrysler's share but still continued to manufacture vehicles at the plant under a contractual basis for Chrysler.

        The DSM's bigger brother, the Mi

        • Thanks for the interesting correction on the assembly location. I knew that the Laser was the less popular third sibling in the Eclipse/Talon/Laser trio, but I've never seen one of the high performance Lasers on the street, or at least didn't know it when I did.

          • by cdrudge ( 68377 )

            Lasers didn't come with the AWD package until 1992 while the other models had it a year before. Production was also discontinued in 1994 while the other two models continued on with the 2nd gen models.

            The difference between the models aside from if they were turbo charged and/or AWD were mainly cosmetic in nature. Elcipses and Talons had a rear spoiler and Lasers did not with it's "Aero" styling, so it always looked like the Lasers were missing something on the rear end in my opinion. Perhaps that's why th

      • I was told by a colleague who owned an Eclipse that he regretted buying the car. He said that although it had a powerful engine, the body/frame was too heavy and negated the power making it slow off the line.

        • What year was it? The first Eclipse was a great car. The second generation was pretty good too. After that, not so much.

  • Mitchy Bitchy had to make up for all those warplanes they never got to build and sell. Glad to see lying companies aren't just in the USA. Do we get to watch homie fall on his sword??!! ***Disclaimer*** I drive a KIA.
  • Cheating was so two decades ago

  • Why admit? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by w.hamra1987 ( 1193987 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2016 @11:14AM (#51989811) Homepage
    What caused them to admit this now? I didn't find any mention of an enquiry or people noticing the difference. Consciousness?
    • Re:Why admit? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by cloud.pt ( 3412475 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2016 @11:31AM (#51989917)
      in Japan they got this bad habit of spewing it all out when the shit first hits the fan. It's some sort of "first-fail atonement", deeply instilled in their culture, which in my humble opinion, is better practice than elsewhere. When you do the "bad thing", odds to get caught are around the sub-10% as you take measures to hide it, but by the time you get caught, odds are you're gonna get caught so they sky-rocket to 99%+ for all other instances of the event that can be analyzed. So why really trust in that meager, uncontrollable 1% that will keep sinking you when you can just apologize for all past, present and future instances of the event? Better just to spit it all out since the milk has already been spilled than have that corrosive loss of confidence haunt you forever. It's actually the best damage control you can do. Nothing like what Volkswagen is doing to be honest - VW won't admit the problem likely exists in other models before 2009. They are also just "patching" really awfully the problem, with a patch that suits emission policy, but that surreptitiously harms the consumer by reducing original power/economy spec, which made the consumer buy the product. It's like they are swiping all the dirt under the rug with the worst possible mop they had lying around, and that rug is already bulgy with previous dirt they hope will stay covered.
    • by orev ( 71566 )
      With the VW revelations you can bet that they are looking more closely at every other car manufacturer as well. Best for them to get out in front of it before someone else reveals it.
      • by tsstahl ( 812393 )

        Agreed. However, I have a feeling we are going to eventually find out that MPG exaggeration is germane to all automakers.

    • There was a report in german newspapers a few weeks ago.

      I thought I also saw it mentioned on some american sites, but not sure.

  • by pablo_max ( 626328 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2016 @11:32AM (#51989927)

    Dear assholes,
    thanks a lot for waiting until we had to pay a crap ton of money to confess that everyone has been doing the same type of things more or less forever.
    yours truly,
    Volkswagen.

  • by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2016 @11:39AM (#51989997)
    But couldn't a big part of the problem be that car companies were allowed to do their own fuel economy tests in the first place? Wouldn't it have been smarted to require use of a third-party testing organization, you know, the same way EVERYTHING ELSE is regulated? For example, RF interference, we don't just do the test ourselves, we have to take the equipment out to a certified testing lab. (They do take our word for it that the equipment we give them is essentially the same thing we will ship to customers.)
    • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2016 @12:00PM (#51990155)
      Might work better if there were an equivalent to the IIHS and their crash-testing. IIHS is not a government agency, but their testing regimen, far more advanced than NHTSA's, shames automakers into doing the right thing.

      Unfortunately there's no, "Wow!" factor with fuel economy testing, compared to fairly spectacular results from IIHS's efforts.
    • Rather than the EPA pay to test every model vehicle released every year, it has the car companies test it themselves. Then the EPA tests a random sample to make sure the car companies were being honest. If a car company decides to cheat, they might get away with it for a few years, but probability says the longer they continue to cheat, the less likely they are to continue to get away with it. If Mitsubishi has been doing this for 25 years and never gotten caught, the Japanese government has apparently n
    • May be, they did. In the case of VW, my understanding is that they didn't cheat on the measurement itself. They cheated by making modified cars specifically for the test. And of course, none of those modified cars were the same as the ones meant for production. Also, I think this kind of cheating is indeed quite widespread in other industries.

      If you buy an energy-rated television, the television has the energy star setting turned off when it is being displayed on the sales floor, and it's definitely brighte

    • There was a time when the team brought its own footballs. Then someone had the bright idea to underinflate the ball to give their quarterback a better grip. We should give all to do the right thing and be honest and be self-policed. Only when they cheat or get caught cheating we dock the privilege. Otherwise enforcement cost will be prohibitive.

      Fundamentally, the world works because most people are mostly honest, most of the time. Shocking! but true.

  • ...the cheap crap engines they make for everybody else? Had an '89 Plymouth Grand Voyager, that we got in '93, that ran really, really well for years. In '03, I traded it in for a '97 Plymouth? Chrysler? Grand Voyage, and I have *never* spent so much money on engine repairs. An engineer I knew told me they'd gone from their own engines to Mitsubishi engines, and *then* he started ranting about the crap they were.

    Based on my personal experience, with head gaskets (never needed one before), oil pan, which be

    • by TWX ( 665546 )
      The '93 would have either had a K-engine (2.2/2.5) or a Mitsubishi 3.0L V6.

      The '97 would have had either a Powertech (2.4) or a a 3.3 or 3.8 V6.

      the 2.4 had a real problem with head gaskets, the bean-counters wouldn't allow them to use the multi-layer steel gasket, and the cheaper gaskets failed, many were replaced under-recall. Unfortunately if the shop did a crap-job under recall (like in my Stratus) then the cooling system could act as a vent for exhaust gases under pressure.
    • Sounds like the kind of problems the Chevy Grand Caravan for their early/mid-2000 model years. My parents bought one, the dealer tried 3 engine swaps and still couldn't get an engine that worked right. They finally wrote it off as a lemon and bought a Kia instead that has been running flawlessly.

  • by kimgkimg ( 957949 ) on Tuesday April 26, 2016 @11:59AM (#51990149)
    The two rogue engineers should definitely get a sternly worded reprimand letter put in the permanent files now...
  • ...that they could get away with it for longer. Japan is a lot more urban so there's a lot more city driving. It's much harder to determine if you're getting worse fuel economy than you were supposed to get when driving conditions already put that fuel economy measurement all over the place.
  • Oh look, all the foreign companies are lying about fuel efficiency to look better and sell product and bring honor to their families. Ever wonder why a lot of foreign company have "better" test scores on standardized tests and it makes the US appear to be ranked 40th or whatever? I'll give you a hint. It starts with "cheat" and ends with "ing."
    • by ewhenn ( 647989 )
      To be fair, my Honda AWD CR-V is rated for 31 MPG highway. I get an actual 33 MPG on the highway.
      • My v6 2000 Mercury Cougar got 42MPG behind a semi at 58 MPH :P They haven't improved fuel efficient in 16 years over a V6 sports car, lol.
  • "We are terribly sorry about this systemic abuse regarding our fuel efficiency numbers. Now, in entirely unrelated news, check out our new line of all-electric vehicles!"

  • Interestingly, that's about how long it's been since Mitsubishi sent any slightly interesting vehicles to the US. It might not be quite as bad if they hadn't just been making forgettable, disposable appliances for decades.
  • So, that's whet he meant. I asked the salesman "is this MPG rating for real?" and his replay was " Yes. Want some pancakes bitches?"
  • I have a 2001 Suzuki Vitara (2L/4cyl. Auto.) It is rated for 20/23 (city/highway) and I routinely get 22/25. I really wish they wouldn't have left the US market.

I cannot conceive that anybody will require multiplications at the rate of 40,000 or even 4,000 per hour ... -- F. H. Wales (1936)

Working...