Airbag recall: Inefficiencies at either BMW or their supplier?

Posted By on January 23, 2018

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One wonders as to the legal responsibility of auto companies when "making a best effort" to correct the airbag issues in their customers’ cars? Are manufacturers held liable when using parts from their suppliers? 

Here’s a comparison: I took our 2006 Honda Pilot in a couple years ago after they notified me about the Takata Airbag Recall in cars they built. The correction by Honda was relatively quick and fixed with a minimum of hassles as soon as I received my recall postcard.

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Currently it is believed that defects in “batwing” shaped wafers of Takata inflators allows moisture to infiltrate over time. This moisture modifies the chemical structure of the propellants. As a result the, propellants ignite too fast, causing the overreaction that ruptures the airbags and propels shrapnel into vehicle occupants. LINK

In contrast, BMW has been far less efficient in doing the same for my 2010 BMW X5 35d and suspect they knew of the problem but were not forced to implement a recall notice at the same time other car manufacturer did? Hence, I received my recall postcard in 2017 and called to schedule the airbag replacement. BMW of Cincinnati North took my call to schedule the replacement, but notified me that the BMWAirbagRecallparts required "were not in stock" and that "they would let me know when they were available" that was several months ago. Yesterday I received an email from them requesting

I called 513-802-9444 as requested and "Ask for the Recall Department" in order to schedule my appointment.  I was told there were  2 recalls (driver and passenger airbags) but they only had parts for the passenger airbag – the reason for the new email contact. I relayed my point of calling several months ago and that I was waiting for the recall parts; they indicated "those parts are unavailable." I asked for clarification … "not available now at the dealership or not available to BMW in order to fix my vehicle?" She assured me that when they became available I would receive a call letting me know.

My question and concern is "How long does a manufacturer have to correct this problem and is BMW alone in "sluggishly" supplying the appropriate parts to their dealers for recalls? Where is the urgency or are they not being held liable for injury … therefore not really expediting the process in getting older vehicles fixed? This could come back to bite them.

EDIT An additional Question: How does BMW fix airbags after a collision if the "parts are not available?"

Watching the weather map while watching our little bebopper

Posted By on January 22, 2018

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Book: Churchill’s Trial by Larry P Arinn

Posted By on January 22, 2018

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After contemplating the purchase of Larry P Arinn‘s Churchill’s Trial at full price since it was published, but having too many unfinished books on my Kindle and reading table, the $1.99 price was exactly what I needed to download. I’m looking forward to the scholarly writing of Dr. Arinn as he delves into the trials that faced one of the most influential leaders in the 20th century. When I think of "statesmanship," I think of Winston Churchill and his challenges not only in dealing with the politics of his own country, but how he dealt with leaders on the international stage. 

When is the 2018 Super Bowl?

Posted By on January 21, 2018

This weekend gave us a “nail-biter and a blowout,” as one writer put it. The Super Bowl will be February 4, 2018 and will be “a rematch of a game we saw less than 15 years ago: Eagles vs. Patriots.” I can’t say I’m really looking forward to it as I don’t care for either team.

The Eagles vs. Patriots – CBSSports.com

Patriots 24 – Jaguars 20 F

Eagles 38 – Vikings 7 F

A government shutdown and not over cuts or more spending

Posted By on January 21, 2018

Washington DC Capitol Government Shutdown Vector Illustration

We are dealing with a government shutdown once again. Our ineffective elected politicians in Washington DC can’t figure out how to work together in a way to even keep the federal government doors open for business … let alone do the actual work to improve the country without making someone suffer (those depending on a regular government check).

The way I see it is that the party in minority, Democrats, think they have found a way to slow the Trump administration’s progress by tying something additional they want to the short term funding bill govtshutdown– in this budget bill’s case it is an immigration issue called DACA that can easily be debated at another time, although without the clout of shutting down the government.

Consider that several previous shutdowns were blamed on Republicans, when they were in the minority, it will be interesting to see if Democrats face the same firestorm for doing the same? If memory serves correctly, previous shutdowns had more to do with excessive spending and too few budget cuts, which are fairly closely tied to monetary budgeting. This shutdown has little to do with monetary budgeting as only four fiscally conservative senators (Rs) opposed the continuing resolution and voted ‘no’ due to the excessive deficit spending. Although the Republicans are in the majority, they still need a 60 senators marging to keep paychecks flowing to federal workers (the House passed it).

So … I’m a little bit more peeved than usual because the debate does not seem to be over the actual budget, deficits or debt or even the programs that are currently funded. In this shutdown, both Republicans and Democrats seem to support existing social programs like the highlighted CHIP program (liberals favor), and the hefty national defense (conservatives tend to favor). Instead … the argument seems to be coming from Democrats, especially the senate leadership, that they need to leverage the passing of the continuing resolution in order to gain something that has little to do with funding the government. One would think the mainstream media and public would at least point this out?

It really does not take that much talent

Posted By on January 20, 2018

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Probably should have been posted as a New Year’s resolution, but this works for ALL and at ALL times in life and career.

TechFriday: Servers, webhosting, pricing and performance

Posted By on January 19, 2018

Besides my personally server and fading Raspberry Pi server projects (just too small), I been using several different companies to host Internet connected servers for Consolidated Printing and Publishing’s customers – traditional servers and virtual Droplets. Having used a variety of dedicated servers and virtual shared machines over the years since first getting into archiving digitally for customers and webhosting in the 1990s, I’ve seen good and I’ve seen really lousy.

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A current favorite is DigitalOcean. Their "Droplet" options are near perfect for most Linux projects; they are inexpensive, reliable and can be "spun up" quickly for each customer or a testing environment. The longer I use them, the more comfortable I am with scalable cloud computing. About the only thing I dislike is ServerUpgrademanaging (and paying for) backups and "snapshots." The latter I use the most.

Recently they upgraded performance and pricing to bring them inline with the lowest cost players in the business … although I haven’t looked into Vultr or Linode since a few dollars a month isn’t hardly worth switching (who knows, I might give them a try next project though?)

For now, all seems to be working with my old school servers and using Digital Ocean for virtual machines and attached SSD volumes. MyDesultoryBlog running on WordPress occasionally stresses the smaller processor and memory, so with the new pricing I’ve added some additional memory and some SSD storage, plus use a DO Volume for some extra storage, Amazon Web Services (AWS) for streaming video and my company’s myarchive.us server for most photos.

Perhaps in 2018 I’ll give MongoDB and Digital Ocean’s Spaces a try for my stalled Quickdex.com project? If you are interesting in anything I can do for you, send me a message.

Do you boil water in a microwave? Take note …

Posted By on January 18, 2018

An old warning that has been passed around the Internet before, but because something similar happened to me with a Corning Corelle bowl last month, figure it was worth sharing.

Boiling Water in a Microwave (also see Snopes)

A 26-year old man decided to have a cup of coffee. He took a cup of water and put it in the microwave to heat it up (something that he had done numerous times before). I am not sure how long he set the timer for, but he wanted to bring the water to a boil. When the timer shut the oven off, he removed the cup from the oven. As he looked into the cup, he noted that the water was not boiling, but suddenly the water in the cup ‘blew up’ into his face. The cup remained intact until he threw it out of his hand, but all the water had flown out into his face due to the build-up of energy . His whole face is blistered and he has 1st and 2nd degree burns to his face which may leave scarring.

He also may have lost partial sight in his left eye. While at the hospital, the doctor who was attending to him stated that this is a fairly common occurrence and water (alone) should never be heated in a microwave oven. If water is heated in this manner, something should be placed in the cup to diffuse the energy such as a wooden stir stick, tea bag, etc, (nothing metal).

General Electric’s Response: (more…)

A beautiful sunset looking west towards downtown Cincinnati

Posted By on January 17, 2018

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Taylor continues to impress me with his enjoying photography. Above is a recent photo (click for larger) he sent me overlooking Cincinnati along the Ohio River – another beautiful sunset photo. I told him that I was going to start encoding them with a digital watermark they are so nice.

I’d like to think of him as a “chip off the ol’ block,” … but I faded from the hobby of photography by the time I was his age and only ended up falling back on what CPPBuildingArtworkI learn in order to teach it (stipend for grad school) and in a way go into business (worked for a newspaper company and started a printing and publishing business– Hmm … I guess the hobby skills transferred a little?)

I hope he stays with it and can enjoy keeping it as a hobby … because from personal experience, once you start making money with it … the interest as a hobby fades or at least it did for me. Great photo Taylor! Keep them coming.

Doppelgänger time with Google Arts and Culture app

Posted By on January 16, 2018

Ok … this Google app is a bit personal … but curiosity and some appreciation for art has me interested enough to forgo my privacy concerns. Google updated their Art and Culture app that compares a persons selfie with their huge archive of art from museums and other institutions. The computer-vision technology compares points on your photo the the ones on thousands of portraits and offers up your doppelgänger.

Here we go with mine, now it’s your turn to give it a try: Android app or iPhone app.

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Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
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