Manufacturing AUTOMATION

Ontario Toyota plant ranks No. 1 on global J.D. Power manufacturing quality comparison

June 19, 2014
By The Associated Press

A Toyota assembly plant in Ontario received the top ranking in an annual report on the quality of cars produced around the world.

The Toyota plant in Cambridge, Ont., which makes the Lexus RX sports utility vehicle, was recognized by Detroit-based J.D. Power for having the fewest defects or malfunctions – 12 per 100 vehicles manufactured.

A General Motors plant in Ingersoll, Ont., that makes the Chevrolet Equinox and GMC Terrain also ranked well, with just 20 defects per 100 vehicles – placing it second in North America and fifth globally.

On a global ranking, Toyota took the top three spots, including the Ontario plant and two Lexus plants in Japan that tied for second at 18 defects per 100. A Nissan plant in Japan that makes Infinitis ranked fourth globally at 19 defects per 100.

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But J.D. Power, which also ranked vehicles in terms of problems experienced by owners of new vehicles, said the race to fill vehicles with the latest technology is hurting quality.

Buyers reported more problems in their new cars and trucks this year than last year – the second straight increase since 2012 when the average number of problems in new cars and trucks hit an all-time low.

Car makers are feeling pressure to add new technology and update vehicles quickly so they don’t get stale. But car buyers are frustrated with Bluetooth systems that won’t connect to their phones, voice recognition systems that don’t understand them and navigation systems that aren’t getting them where they need to go.

“Anytime you make a significant change to a vehicle you have the opportunity to introduce more problems,” said David Sargent, vice-president for global automotive at J.D. Power.

Porsche, Jaguar, Lexus, Hyundai and Toyota were the best-performing brands in this year’s survey. The worst performers were Fiat, Jeep, Mitsubishi, Scion and Mazda.

Sargent said younger buyers are more likely to complain about problems than older drivers who are more tolerant of mechanical issues.

“Younger drivers didn’t grow up in an era where cars had things that fell off,” Sargent said. On the flip side, he said, younger drivers are less frustrated by the technology in their cars.

Buyers reported an average of 116 problems per 100 vehicles in the first 90 days of ownership, up three per cent from last year.

J.D. Power surveyed 86,000 owners between February and March of this year. One major brand, Tesla, isn’t included because J.D. Power didn’t have enough data from owners.

The survey is the first major assessment of quality for 2014 vehicles, and it’s closely watched by car shoppers. Consumer Reports magazine’s influential quality study comes out in October and includes other years.


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