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EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Sun, 20 Sep 2015 07:56:20 -0700, sms
wrote: On 9/19/2015 10:51 PM, Ewald Böhm wrote: On Sat, 19 Sep 2015 05:30:45 -0400, Steve W. wrote: How do you figure that "almost no states use OBD" testing. In fact most of the states do not use a dyno any longer. I just had mine tested, in California, and they used a dyno. No OBD hookup whatsoever. How did they check for pending codes if they did not use a code scanner? You can't pass with more than two pending codes (one on some years). That shop would be shut down by the state if it was found that they were passing cars without checking for pending codes. In ontario the testers are directly connected to a central computer and it is virtually impossible to go from stem 1 to step 3 without completing step 2 first. A number of years back, some crooks were running a "good" vehicle through the test 5 or 6 times, entering the Vin for one that would not pass. They made changes to the system that prevented that pretty quick. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
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EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's beingtested?
On Sun, 20 Sep 2015 12:12:31 -0400, Scott Dorsey wrote:
They look for the light on the dashboard that indicates codes have been logged. That. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's beingtested?
On Sun, 20 Sep 2015 07:54:12 -0700, sms wrote:
You said it yourself. You can't pass emissions with pending codes. They have to run a scan to check this. You have a good point. I need to recheck my facts. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's beingtested?
On Sat, 19 Sep 2015 00:19:10 +0000, Ewald Böhm wrote:
My question is HOW did the car *know* it was being *tested* for emissions? http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/...agen/72436098/ The software code allows all of the car's emissions systems to work when the cars are taken in for clean-air testing. But as soon as the emissions tests are complete, the system reverts to spewing pollutants. The cars emitted nitrogen oxide at a level of up to 40 times the standard level, the EPA alleges. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On 9/20/2015 1:29 PM, Mitch Kaufmann wrote:
On Sat, 19 Sep 2015 00:19:10 +0000, Ewald Böhm wrote: My question is HOW did the car *know* it was being *tested* for emissions? http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/...agen/72436098/ The software code allows all of the car's emissions systems to work when the cars are taken in for clean-air testing. But as soon as the emissions tests are complete, the system reverts to spewing pollutants. The cars emitted nitrogen oxide at a level of up to 40 times the standard level, the EPA alleges. According to the LA Times: "Rather than meet the standards, the EPA says VW sneaked in the defeat device software to detect when the car is hooked up to a dynamometer, a machine that measures emissions. When emissions are being measured, the defeat device tells the car to operate at "dyno calibration," or full emission control levels, to meet the standards." "At all other times, however, the software sets the engine to run on "road calibration," allowing the excessive emissions. How can the program tell the difference? By noting the position of the steering wheel, variations in speed and other data that suggest no one is driving the car, and thus it is likely being tested." |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On 9/20/2015 9:12 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
sms wrote: On 9/19/2015 10:51 PM, Ewald Böhm wrote: On Sat, 19 Sep 2015 05:30:45 -0400, Steve W. wrote: How do you figure that "almost no states use OBD" testing. In fact most of the states do not use a dyno any longer. I just had mine tested, in California, and they used a dyno. No OBD hookup whatsoever. How did they check for pending codes if they did not use a code scanner? You can't pass with more than two pending codes (one on some years). They look for the light on the dashboard that indicates codes have been logged. In some places they always use the scanner to make sure, for instance, that the ECU wasn't reset immdiately before taking the car in for inspection. In some places they do not. Well in California they definitely check via the OBD-II port. I had replaced a battery and there were no dashboard lights indicating anything. The first thing they did was to do a scan for codes. The number of pending codes that is allowable varies by year of manufacture. A good shop will tell you the drive sequence to clear the pending codes for each model. A bad shop won't even know this information. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
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EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Sun, 20 Sep 2015 15:49:16 -0700, sms
wrote: On 9/20/2015 9:12 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote: sms wrote: On 9/19/2015 10:51 PM, Ewald Böhm wrote: On Sat, 19 Sep 2015 05:30:45 -0400, Steve W. wrote: How do you figure that "almost no states use OBD" testing. In fact most of the states do not use a dyno any longer. I just had mine tested, in California, and they used a dyno. No OBD hookup whatsoever. How did they check for pending codes if they did not use a code scanner? You can't pass with more than two pending codes (one on some years). They look for the light on the dashboard that indicates codes have been logged. In some places they always use the scanner to make sure, for instance, that the ECU wasn't reset immdiately before taking the car in for inspection. In some places they do not. Well in California they definitely check via the OBD-II port. I had replaced a battery and there were no dashboard lights indicating anything. The first thing they did was to do a scan for codes. The number of pending codes that is allowable varies by year of manufacture. A good shop will tell you the drive sequence to clear the pending codes for each model. A bad shop won't even know this information. Actually it is not pending codes that are the issue. It is the readiness monitors.. Can't remember how many readiness monitors there are - but there's a catalyst monitor, a O2 sensor monitor, and EGR monitors, and O2sensor heater and cat heater monitor on some vehicles. These are the intermittent monitors that need to be "set" . Setting the monitor just means they have been through one or more test sequences and have aquired valid data.. The rest of the monitors are contimuous monitors - misfire, component, and fuel system, nonitors. The evap monitor, for instance, is only "valid" in a fixed temperature range, and with the tank between something like 1/4 and 3/4 full (not 100% sure of the actual numbrs). If you reset the codes or replace the battery on a vehicle with the tank full or almost empty you can NOT set the readiness monitor for the evap system - so virtually ALL OBD2 based emission test facilities will allow at least one monitor to be un-set or not ready. If you know what code is coming up, and want to "cheat" the system, if you can avoid setting that particular monitor, while setting all the others, you can sometimes get a vehicle to pass. You need to understand the drive cycle and what can cause the monitor you want dissabled to fail to set. (and it needs to be an intermittent or non-continuous monitor. The usual culprits are Cat, evap, or EGR. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's beingtested?
On Sun, 20 Sep 2015 15:49:16 -0700, sms wrote:
The number of pending codes that is allowable varies by year of manufacture. A good shop will tell you the drive sequence to clear the pending codes for each model. A bad shop won't even know this information. It's usually documented as the FTP. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's beingtested?
On Sun, 20 Sep 2015 16:29:30 -0400, Mitch Kaufmann wrote:
On Sat, 19 Sep 2015 00:19:10 +0000, Ewald Böhm wrote: My question is HOW did the car *know* it was being *tested* for emissions? http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/...agen/72436098/ The software code allows all of the car's emissions systems to work when the cars are taken in for clean-air testing. But as soon as the emissions tests are complete, the system reverts to spewing pollutants. The cars emitted nitrogen oxide at a level of up to 40 times the standard level, the EPA alleges. That answers what. But it doesn't answer HOW. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's beingtested?
On Sun, 20 Sep 2015 14:03:08 -0700, Sofa Slug wrote:
How can the program tell the difference? By noting the position of the steering wheel, variations in speed and other data that suggest no one is driving the car, and thus it is likely being tested." Finally! Someone who both understood the question, and who posited an answer! Of all the posters, you're the ONLY one who understood the question! |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's beingtested?
Sofa Slug wrote in :
VW sneaked in the defeat device software to detect when the car is hooked up to a dynamometer What I'm surprised at is that each state can have a *different* procedure. In California, they use the dyno, but in many less technical states, they still use the dumb procedures. This explains how they noticed there was testing going on. http://www.latimes.com/opinion/edito...919-story.html http://www.rocketnews.com/2015/09/did-volkswagen-cheat/ But that only works for the intelligent states. How did they also fool the low-tech states like NJ, Kentucky & Kansas? |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's beingtested?
On Sat, 19 Sep 2015 00:19:10 +0000, Ewald Böhm wrote:
My question is HOW did the car *know* it was being *tested* for emissions? The best answer to the question seems to be here, as noted by Sofa Slug: http://www.rocketnews.com/2015/09/did-volkswagen-cheat/ http://www.latimes.com/opinion/edito...919-story.html "How can the program tell the difference? By noting the position of the steering wheel, variations in speed and other data that suggest no one is driving the car, and thus it is likely being tested." Apparently VW lied at first, & apparently they can no longer sell the cars: "The cheating came to light when the California Air Resources Board and the EPA pressed Volkswagen for an explanation for disparities found between lab tests and road tests of its vehicle emissions. The agencies didn't find the technical reasons offered by VW to be convincing and said they would not issue certificates allowing 2016 models to be sold until the automaker offered an adequate explanation. "Only then did VW admit it had designed and installed a defeat device in these vehicles," the EPA said. VW said it was cooperating with the investigation but otherwise had no comment." It's interesting that VW didn't fess up until they were forced to. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 07:57:34 -0500, Ewald Böhm
wrote: On Sat, 19 Sep 2015 00:19:10 +0000, Ewald Böhm wrote: My question is HOW did the car *know* it was being *tested* for emissions? The best answer to the question seems to be here, as noted by Sofa Slug: http://www.rocketnews.com/2015/09/did-volkswagen-cheat/ http://www.latimes.com/opinion/edito...919-story.html "How can the program tell the difference? By noting the position of the steering wheel, variations in speed and other data that suggest no one is driving the car, and thus it is likely being tested." Apparently VW lied at first, & apparently they can no longer sell the cars: "The cheating came to light when the California Air Resources Board and the EPA pressed Volkswagen for an explanation for disparities found between lab tests and road tests of its vehicle emissions. The agencies didn't find the technical reasons offered by VW to be convincing and said they would not issue certificates allowing 2016 models to be sold until the automaker offered an adequate explanation. "Only then did VW admit it had designed and installed a defeat device in these vehicles," the EPA said. VW said it was cooperating with the investigation but otherwise had no comment." It's interesting that VW didn't fess up until they were forced to. That's pretty much human nature going back to the Garden of Eden. The next trick is to blame someone else. A TV show from long ago had comedian Flip Wilson on. His line was "The devil made me do it". -- Using Opera's mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's beingtested?
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EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
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EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
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EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 09:43:43 -0700, "Bob F"
wrote: wrote: On Sat, 19 Sep 2015 12:08:40 -0700, "Bob F" wrote: Steve W. wrote: . wrote: On 9/19/2015 11:12 AM, Steve W. wrote: Sure will. You have to enter the VIN into the system to start the inspection. IF the EPA requires a recall to reflash the ECM to remove that software and "correct" the problem, that would have to be done at a dealer. They will track completed vehicles by VIN. The state can just flag ALL those vehicles. You pull in, they plug in the tester, and your VIN doesn't show on the "recall complete" list. You don't get inspected. That has happened before for other recalls. I'm betting the fix will be to re-flash the ECM software to remove the "switch". Then run each one through the full EPA test regardless of registration state. That because this if a federal law that was broken. What will be fun will be watching all the johnny racer types who modified the cars by removing emissions gear and "tuning" the ECM. VW could actually show them to the EPA and say "THEY removed the systems so they should pay a fine as well". When has the EPA ever gone after individual passenger car vehicle owners? Happens a lot more than you might think. States get into the act under the umbrella of the EPA laws. VW intentionally wrote software for their vehicles with the express intent of violating the EPA laws. They admitted to that already so it will be interesting to see what happens. The EPA could recall the cars, judge them as "unrepairable gross polluters" and have them crushed. I doubt they will go that far but they have done it before under the "cars for cash" BS. Or, the EPA could require that all the cheating cars be re-programmed to meet requirements all the time, and owners could sue VW's ass off for cheating them, since the resulting performance will be terrible. The cars should be re-programmed, at the expense of VW. And then a lot of class action suits should be filed against VW. I suppose, to be fair to the car buyers who did not knowingly participate in the scam, there should be an option to have the new firmware installed. If they get the new firmware then they get to sue. If not then they would get no compensation because they have not suffered a loss. ERS No loss other than being unable to license their cars? If they cannot license their cars without a firmware update then they have suffered a loss and should of course be able to sue or otherwise be remunerated. I was thinking about the car owners who live in an area where cars are not smog checked. For example, I live in Island County which is about 30 Miles from Seattle which is in King County. This means I don't have to get my vehicles smog checked whereas King County residents do. I don't know how CA does smog checks but I suspect everyone who lives there has to get one. I can see that I should have thought of that before I posted my comments. I just heard on the news that there are about 450,000 vehicles in the USA that have the dishonest firmware and that the EPA can fine VW $37,500 for each car. I find it amazing that so many people would participate in such a dishonest act, and that it could remain secret for so long. All sorts of folks, from the upper management to the software writers, had to know about and agree to actively participate in the fraud. I can see how some would do so because of greed. And others may have been afraid of losing their jobs. But I would think that many would refuse to commit fraud and that some of them would spill the beans. I guess I'm naive. Eric |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 12:57:34 +0000 (UTC), Ewald Böhm wrote:
My question is HOW did the car *know* it was being *tested* for emissions? The best answer to the question seems to be here, as noted by Sofa Slug: http://www.rocketnews.com/2015/09/did-volkswagen-cheat/ http://www.latimes.com/opinion/edito...919-story.html Staying on topic, this article says the cheat only worked when there was a DYNO involved! http://www.chron.com/business/energy...on-6520088.php Here are the contiguous quotes: (begin quote) VW used secret software €” an algorithm that detects when cars are being tested on treadmill-like devices called dynamometers, and stealthily switches the engines to a cleaner mode. Because *smog tests are almost always done on dynamometers*, VW got away with the scheme for seven years, until the "clean transportation" advocates went to West Virginia University, which tests emissions using equipment that fits in car trunks. (end quote) |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 07:13:08 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
They got their buddies selling dynos to be rich. Why is it called a dyno if it's spelled dynamometer? Why not call it a dyna? |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
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EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 17:30:19 -0700, Danny D. wrote:
This article says the whole TDI Clean Diesel campaign is a fraud. I don't drive a diesel. What was the "TDI Clean Diesel" campaign anyway? Oopops. Forgot to include the url: http://www.popularmechanics.com/cars...l-controversy/ What was this "TDI Clean Diesel" campaign anyway? And, what does that have to do with "urea" injection? How does this UREA injection work? |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 19:34:46 -0500, Danny D. wrote:
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 17:30:19 -0700, Danny D. wrote: This article says the whole TDI Clean Diesel campaign is a fraud. I don't drive a diesel. What was the "TDI Clean Diesel" campaign anyway? Oopops. Forgot to include the url: http://www.popularmechanics.com/cars...l-controversy/ What was this "TDI Clean Diesel" campaign anyway? Apparently a way to avoid the urea injection everyone else used to get emissions down to the legal limit. And, what does that have to do with "urea" injection? Both are supposedly ways to meet emissions standards. One works. The other is Wizard of Oz engineering apparently. How does this UREA injection work? A youtube explanation: http://preview.tinyurl.com/pumvto8 I didn't watch it and ain't qualified to say if it's correct. Have you noticed signs at truck stops saying "DEF Sold In All Lanes"? That's diesel exhaust fluid or urea. -- Using Opera's mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
"Danny D." writes:
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 17:30:19 -0700, Danny D. wrote: This article says the whole TDI Clean Diesel campaign is a fraud. I don't drive a diesel. What was the "TDI Clean Diesel" campaign anyway? Oopops. Forgot to include the url: http://www.popularmechanics.com/cars...l-controversy/ What was this "TDI Clean Diesel" campaign anyway? And, what does that have to do with "urea" injection? How does this UREA injection work? It's in the article: All the other carmakers control diesel emissions by spraying a urea solution into the exhaust stream, where a catalyst converts it to ammonia. The ammonia breaks down NOx into nitrogen and water. -- Dan Espen |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
In rec.autos.tech Lucia Gallo wrote:
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 12:57:34 +0000 (UTC), Ewald Böhm wrote: My question is HOW did the car *know* it was being *tested* for emissions? Staying on topic, this article says the cheat only worked when there was a DYNO involved! http://www.chron.com/business/energy...on-6520088.php Here are the contiguous quotes: (begin quote) VW used secret software ? an algorithm that detects when cars are being tested on treadmill-like devices called dynamometers, and stealthily switches the engines to a cleaner mode. Because *smog tests are almost always done on dynamometers*, VW got away with the scheme for seven years, until the "clean transportation" advocates went to West Virginia University, which tests emissions using equipment that fits in car trunks. (end quote) I have seen a suggestion that the onboard computer takes note of the fact that the rear wheels are rotating and the front wheels are stationary. That seems plausible to me. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 21:07:31 -0700, Jack Myers wrote:
I have seen a suggestion that the onboard computer takes note of the fact that the rear wheels are rotating and the front wheels are stationary. That seems plausible to me. They didn't explicity mention that, but this article has a section named How did this alleged cheat work exactly? http://jalopnik.com/your-guide-to-di...g-c-1731857018 |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 21:44:12 -0700, Sam Wilhelm wrote:
How did this alleged cheat work exactly? http://www.greencarreports.com/news/...estions/page-2 (4) What exactly did VW do? Volkswagen has admitted that it equipped the control software for its 2.0-liter TDI diesel vehicles with a "defeat device" that detected when the car was undergoing emissions testing and significantly changed the operations of its powertrain to reduce emissions during the tests. That detection was likely based on a combination of sensor data from the car, which might include steering angle (since cars on dynamometer tests don't make turns), front-wheel versus rear-wheel rotation speed, and a variety of other factors. It appears that a combination of the factors above plus extremely gentle acceleration and braking might alert the car that it wasn't on the road but being tested in a lab. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 12:46:48 +0000 (UTC), Ewald Böhm wrote:
But it doesn't answer HOW. http://www.greencarreports.com/news/...estions/page-2 Based on discussions with knowledgeable sources, we surmise that once an emissions test was detected, VW got the affected TDI engines to meet the Tier 2, Bin 5 NOx limits by reducing the fuel flow rate. This would reduce performance, but most likely not to the point where the car couldn't complete the emission cycles. Lowering fuel flow would also reduce combustion temperatures and/or the duration of high-temperature operation enough to keep NOx emissions barely within EPA limits. If the car detected that it was no longer in "testing mode" but had returned to "driving mode," it would restore fuel flow to the regular level--which would send NOx emissions soaring. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Sat, 19 Sep 2015 00:19:10 +0000 (UTC), Ewald Böhm wrote:
My question is HOW did the car *know* it was being *tested* for emissions? http://www3.epa.gov/otaq/cert/docume...a-09-18-15.pdf |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 22:05:54 -0700, Jack Black wrote:
My question is HOW did the car *know* it was being *tested* for emissions? http://www3.epa.gov/otaq/cert/docume...a-09-18-15.pdf VW manufactured and installed software in the electronic control module (ECM) of these vehicles that sensed when the behicle was being tested for compliance with EPA emission standards. For ease of reference, the EPA is calling this the "switch". The "switch" senses whether the vehicle is being tested or not based on various inputs including teh position of the steering wheel, vehicle speed, the duration of the engine's operation, and barometric pressure. These inputs precisely track the parameters of the federal test procedure used for emission testing for EPA certification purposes. During EPA emission testing, the vehicle's ECM ran software which produced compliant emission results under and ECM calibration chart that VW referred to as the "dyno calibration". |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
" I find it amazing that so many people would participate in such a
dishonest act, and that it could remain secret for so long." Sorry. Seems like you are a good person and projecting, trying to think everyone else is good. That ain't how it is. Companies have a roomful of lawyers and accountant who do nothing but figure out odds on how much they can break the law or endanger people with a cheap design, versus how much it will cost them if they get caught, or have lawsuits. It is like playing poker. If you now ht you're doing, it is all a matter of real odds versus pot odds. that is how they think. That is how they stay on the board of directors, because they live the company on the edge. And if they don't they are voted out. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On 9/21/2015 9:07 PM, Jack Myers wrote:
snip I have seen a suggestion that the onboard computer takes note of the fact that the rear wheels are rotating and the front wheels are stationary. That seems plausible to me. Well the opposite for most or all VWs, but that makes sense. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
I think a potato stuffed up the exhaust pipe would do just as much at half
the cost. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
| My question is HOW did the car *know* it was being *tested* for
emissions? | I'm more curious about how the EPA didn't figure it out earlier. Reports say the EPA saw a discrepancy between testing and on-road results. But they've been haggling with VW all this time and somehow never thought to look at the software. Is the software accessible to EPA? Do they have developers who could understand it? How the test is faked is just a technical issue. How the EPA didn't figure it out seems to be the important issue. They only found out because they threatened to hold up sales and at that point the VW execs admitted what they were doing. (Have they disclosed everything? Surely if there's more dirty dealing they're not going to tell if they don't have to.) ... Then of course there's the question that begs to be asked: How could all of those executives, in a company whose clientelle tend to be liberal environmentalists, have possibly decided it was a good idea to be so dishonest and shortsighted? There should be arrests. Either way, it's likely to be a serious, perhaps fatal, blow to the company. If it were Chevy I'm sure rednecks would come out of the woodwork to support "the company that denies global warming". But VW customers are almost a cult following, and mostly liberal. |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On 2015-09-22, Mayayana wrote:
There should be arrests. Should there have been arrests of EPA miscreants (or the environmentalists that petitioned them to do so) for the hatchet job they did on DDT? This resulted in millions of third-world deaths from malaria due to other countries following our lead: http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/v...ry.asp?id=1259 -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Roger Blake (Change "invalid" to "com" for email. Google Groups killfiled.) NSA sedition and treason -- http://www.DeathToNSAthugs.com ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
Mayayana wrote:
I'm more curious about how the EPA didn't figure it out earlier. Reports say the EPA saw a discrepancy between testing and on-road results. But they've been haggling with VW all this time and somehow never thought to look at the software. Is the software accessible to EPA? Do they have developers who could understand it? No. The software is a black box both to vehicle owners and the EPA. Not only that, but under the DMCA it would be illegal for vehicle owners OR the EPA to attempt reverse-engineering it from the object load. How the test is faked is just a technical issue. How the EPA didn't figure it out seems to be the important issue. They only found out because they threatened to hold up sales and at that point the VW execs admitted what they were doing. (Have they disclosed everything? Surely if there's more dirty dealing they're not going to tell if they don't have to.) Gaming the system is a longstanding tradition among car manufacturers and I am _sure_ that if the source code were made public that all manner of interesting games would be found. ... Then of course there's the question that begs to be asked: How could all of those executives, in a company whose clientelle tend to be liberal environmentalists, have possibly decided it was a good idea to be so dishonest and shortsighted? THAT is the best question of all, yes. But that is a question that needs to be asked by stockholders, and I have a suspicion that the next annual meeting at Volkswagen will be interesting. There should be arrests. Either way, it's likely to be a serious, perhaps fatal, blow to the company. If it were Chevy I'm sure rednecks would come out of the woodwork to support "the company that denies global warming". But VW customers are almost a cult following, and mostly liberal. Arrests will do nothing. What has to happen is that vehicle control code needs to be documented and available to the vehicle owner and to the government inspectors. Yes, I know this makes it easier for technology to be stolen in places where patent and trademark law is unenforced (such as China, where the car industry is growing by leaps and bounds and trying to learn as much as possible from Western and Japanese manufacturers by any means possible). But, it's necessary. If you want to see something REALLY evil, take a look at John Deere's take on their proprietary control systems. THERE are some people who could use arresting. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
Roger Blake wrote:
On 2015-09-22, Mayayana wrote: There should be arrests. Should there have been arrests of EPA miscreants (or the environmentalists that petitioned them to do so) for the hatchet job they did on DDT? This resulted in millions of third-world deaths from malaria due to other countries following our lead: http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/v...ry.asp?id=1259 This article is not exactly accurate. In the fifties, DDT was amazing, it worked great. We put it between our sheets. You could spray it in the air and see insects dropping out right and left. But... by the seventies, mosquitoes (at least in Hawaii where I lived) had pretty much become immune to the stuff. Enormous, absolutely enormous amounts were necessary to kill insects. This is why there were environmental effects. My father had a gadget that would drop a mix of diesel and DDT into the muffler of the lawnmower and the smoke would kill mosquitoes, but by the seventies it wasn't killing them any more, even with a couple pounds of the stuff being burned. Give it another forty years or so and we might be able to start using DDT in a small way again. But it was the massive overuse and abuse of DDT that got us to the point where it was banned, not some crazy left-wind conspiracy. And yes, it WAS one of the big weapons in the fight against malaria, and it was a crime to lose that weapon. But it wasn't politicians that lost it. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
EPA caught VW cheating - how does the car know it's being tested?
On 09/22/2015 7:07 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
Mayayana wrote: I'm more curious about how the EPA didn't figure it out earlier. Reports say the EPA saw a discrepancy between testing and on-road results. But they've been haggling with VW all this time and somehow never thought to look at the software. Is the software accessible to EPA? Do they have developers who could understand it? No. The software is a black box both to vehicle owners and the EPA. Not only that, but under the DMCA it would be illegal for vehicle owners OR the EPA to attempt reverse-engineering it from the object load. How the test is faked is just a technical issue. How the EPA didn't figure it out seems to be the important issue. They only found out because they threatened to hold up sales and at that point the VW execs admitted what they were doing. (Have they disclosed everything? Surely if there's more dirty dealing they're not going to tell if they don't have to.) Gaming the system is a longstanding tradition among car manufacturers and I am _sure_ that if the source code were made public that all manner of interesting games would be found. ... Then of course there's the question that begs to be asked: How could all of those executives, in a company whose clientelle tend to be liberal environmentalists, have possibly decided it was a good idea to be so dishonest and shortsighted? THAT is the best question of all, yes. But that is a question that needs to be asked by stockholders, and I have a suspicion that the next annual meeting at Volkswagen will be interesting. There should be arrests. Either way, it's likely to be a serious, perhaps fatal, blow to the company. If it were Chevy I'm sure rednecks would come out of the woodwork to support "the company that denies global warming". But VW customers are almost a cult following, and mostly liberal. Arrests will do nothing. What has to happen is that vehicle control code needs to be documented and available to the vehicle owner and to the government inspectors. Yes, I know this makes it easier for technology to be stolen in places where patent and trademark law is unenforced (such as China, where the car industry is growing by leaps and bounds and trying to learn as much as possible from Western and Japanese manufacturers by any means possible). But, it's necessary. If you want to see something REALLY evil, take a look at John Deere's take on their proprietary control systems. THERE are some people who could use arresting. --scott Not just John Dee http://www.wired.com/2015/02/new-hig...tmare-farmers/ https://dmca.digitalrighttorepair.org/ John :-#(# -- (Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup) John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9 (604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games) www.flippers.com "Old pinballers never die, they just flip out." |
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