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Volkswagen’s diesel scandal

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Created by Ted the Kiwi > 9 months ago, 24 Sep 2015
Harrow
NSW, 4521 posts
1 Oct 2015 10:18AM
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sotired said..

Surely the power and fuel economy values affect how many people buy their cars, so they have been lying. Period.

It's called a 'full-stop' in Australia. Do we really want to propagate this Americanism?

Kamikuza
QLD, 6493 posts
1 Oct 2015 10:22AM
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sotired said..

Macroscien said..


sotired said..

How long does it take you to go through 60 litres of petrol in your mower or auger?





I am sure that my gargen power tools like mower and augers do not exceed norms 40 times but 4000x fold that poor VW.I one weekend mowing or auger drilling we could assimilate more toxins that driving whole week on the road.All this once enjoying "healthy" work around garden or home.



How are you sure of that?

Do you have petrol power tools or diesel ones?

Again, one hour of mowing probably uses a couple of litres of fuel, and a couple of hours of driving probably uses 20 litres of fuel. I drive a lot more each week than I mow.

Regardless, defending VW is silly. The rules were there for all to meet, and they had a choice to meet them or not. Not a choice to defeat the testing mechanism. Surely the power and fuel economy values affect how many people buy their cars, so they have been lying. Period.

Even if you burn 20 litres of diesel in a bonfire every afternoon, you still can't get away from the fact that they lied and competed with other suppliers on an un-level playing field.

I wonder what the response would be if it was Holden that was found to do this. There would be outrage!


Mythbusters did "motorbikes are greener than cars"... Nope. Bikes get better mileage but put out more nasties...

Outrage only from Ford drivers...

FormulaNova
WA, 14424 posts
1 Oct 2015 12:37PM
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Kamikuza said..

sotired said..


Macroscien said..



sotired said..

How long does it take you to go through 60 litres of petrol in your mower or auger?






I am sure that my gargen power tools like mower and augers do not exceed norms 40 times but 4000x fold that poor VW.I one weekend mowing or auger drilling we could assimilate more toxins that driving whole week on the road.All this once enjoying "healthy" work around garden or home.




How are you sure of that?

Do you have petrol power tools or diesel ones?

Again, one hour of mowing probably uses a couple of litres of fuel, and a couple of hours of driving probably uses 20 litres of fuel. I drive a lot more each week than I mow.

Regardless, defending VW is silly. The rules were there for all to meet, and they had a choice to meet them or not. Not a choice to defeat the testing mechanism. Surely the power and fuel economy values affect how many people buy their cars, so they have been lying. Period.

Even if you burn 20 litres of diesel in a bonfire every afternoon, you still can't get away from the fact that they lied and competed with other suppliers on an un-level playing field.

I wonder what the response would be if it was Holden that was found to do this. There would be outrage!



Mythbusters did "motorbikes are greener than cars"... Nope. Bikes get better mileage but put out more nasties...

Outrage only from Ford drivers...


Yeah, but how many times do you drive a mower on the highway for it to be a meaningful comparison to a VW on the basis of emissions?

The VW owners I know will defend the brand, no matter what the situation. I think they could be burning puppies in the engine bay, and other VW owners would say it is acceptable. Not for their beloved German brand which has 'special German engineering'.




Kamikuza
QLD, 6493 posts
1 Oct 2015 2:57PM
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Never. But add up all the mowers...

Its like 50cc scooters. Great mileage but all that oil they burn! Now multiply that by, like, all of the people in ****ing Asia... Makes your V8 look positively green.

kemp90
QLD, 1694 posts
1 Oct 2015 4:34PM
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FormulaNova said...
Kamikuza said..

sotired said..


Macroscien said..



sotired said..

How long does it take you to go through 60 litres of petrol in your mower or auger?






I am sure that my gargen power tools like mower and augers do not exceed norms 40 times but 4000x fold that poor VW.I one weekend mowing or auger drilling we could assimilate more toxins that driving whole week on the road.All this once enjoying "healthy" work around garden or home.




How are you sure of that?

Do you have petrol power tools or diesel ones?

Again, one hour of mowing probably uses a couple of litres of fuel, and a couple of hours of driving probably uses 20 litres of fuel. I drive a lot more each week than I mow.

Regardless, defending VW is silly. The rules were there for all to meet, and they had a choice to meet them or not. Not a choice to defeat the testing mechanism. Surely the power and fuel economy values affect how many people buy their cars, so they have been lying. Period.

Even if you burn 20 litres of diesel in a bonfire every afternoon, you still can't get away from the fact that they lied and competed with other suppliers on an un-level playing field.

I wonder what the response would be if it was Holden that was found to do this. There would be outrage!



Mythbusters did "motorbikes are greener than cars"... Nope. Bikes get better mileage but put out more nasties...

Outrage only from Ford drivers...


Yeah, but how many times do you drive a mower on the highway for it to be a meaningful comparison to a VW on the basis of emissions?

The VW owners I know will defend the brand, no matter what the situation. I think they could be burning puppies in the engine bay, and other VW owners would say it is acceptable. Not for their beloved German brand which has 'special German engineering'.







Bro, I love my vw. Such an awesome car, but they faarked up. I'm not going to defend that. But in it makes sense why it's so much more powerful then other cars in its class.

djt91184
QLD, 1211 posts
1 Oct 2015 6:16PM
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Why would anyone defend a rich car company, this day and age they should be leading by example not pretending to untill they get caught out breaking the rules. Snivelling scumbags are driven by greed

AUS1111
WA, 3617 posts
1 Oct 2015 4:51PM
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It's a disgrace. It's indefensible.

It's also the work of some group of individuals, and those responsible should be held to account and punished accordingly.

It is not the fault of the other tens of thousands of employees of VW, nor the millions of shareholders - and it is concerning these are the people who will be punished by the likelihood of billions in fines and other costs. If the company gets hit with massive fines but those who did the dirty work get off scott free (as has been the case with banking scandals), that is a gross miscarriage of justice.

sotired
WA, 598 posts
2 Oct 2015 9:54AM
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AUS1111 said..
It's a disgrace. It's indefensible.

It's also the work of some group of individuals, and those responsible should be held to account and punished accordingly.

It is not the fault of the other tens of thousands of employees of VW, nor the millions of shareholders - and it is concerning these are the people who will be punished by the likelihood of billions in fines and other costs. If the company gets hit with massive fines but those who did the dirty work get off scott free (as has been the case with banking scandals), that is a gross miscarriage of justice.


Unfortunately, you have to assign blame somewhere, and if the attractiveness of fuel-efficient, powerful diesels that also meet emissions requirements has driven up demand for these cars, then the whole company has to suffer, shareholders and all.

The shareholders are not guaranteed any performance. It is the sharemarket, not a guaranteed bank deposit.

I wonder if its possible to make such a feature without someone at the top really knowing about it. I know its technically possible, as all it takes is one layer of management to keep it quiet and not tell his superiors, but in this case I doubt it.

I think VW came clean to the EPA about it when questioned about it, so I doubt it was too much of a secret for the management.

FormulaNova
WA, 14424 posts
2 Oct 2015 10:01AM
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Kamikuza said..
Never. But add up all the mowers...

Its like 50cc scooters. Great mileage but all that oil they burn! Now multiply that by, like, all of the people in ****ing Asia... Makes your V8 look positively green.


I think you are missing the point I am trying to make.

The fuel you use in mowing your lawn is going to be about a litre a week or fortnight. The fuel you use in your car is probably going to be much more than that, and in my case, at least a 100 times that. If there are multiple cars in that household, or residents in that unit block, then the number of litres used by the residents is much higher than the fuel used in mowing the lawn.

In Australia at one stage recently they were going to ban 2-stroke mowers and whipper snippers. They apparently changed their minds.

Sure, scooters used all the time are a different conversation. Having said that, are modern scooters all that bad? Are they fuel injected? If they are 2-stroke I guess they are burning more oil, but otherwise, maybe not.


Kamikuza
QLD, 6493 posts
2 Oct 2015 6:40PM
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I don't think theyre fuel injected -- Aprilla tried that with the V-due to beat emissions, but it didn't work...

Never been to Asia? Honda Cub is the everymans ute, a NiftyFifty ever kids first car.

Not in Oz maybe, but gas powered trimmers are ubiquitous around the paddy fields. The neighbor mows his yard with one! They may use less gass but the emissions are worse, and they get used heavily here.

djt91184
QLD, 1211 posts
2 Oct 2015 7:50PM
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Volkswagen lies good whipper snipper bad

DaylightDebt
WA, 296 posts
2 Oct 2015 9:58PM
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Looking forward to the day I can buy a golf R great performance and enviromentaly sound as far as a a car can be. Im of the opinion if low emissions are the reason you buy a car then you should buy a cycle! Fact cars will pollute and in the greater scheme of things this will have no enviromental impact. Hey a volcano might errupt in iceland and undo all the good us humans have been doing for the past couple of decades. And if I need to leave the area in a hurry and there was a choice between a cycle or a VW I know what I would choose.

Chris6791
WA, 3271 posts
2 Oct 2015 10:18PM
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We're buying low emission cars because the govt is making the manufacturers build low emission cars (VW excluded at this point). The same way we are forced to buy safe cars, that was initiated by govt as well. Manufacturers were forced to provide seatbelts etc way back when. Since then they've just evolved to market it as their own idea.

And volcanoes are good for global warming, all that ash reflects solar energy back into space :)

Ian K
WA, 4048 posts
6 Oct 2015 10:53AM
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A good day for photochemical smog. Here you can see the NOX emissions from the VW Golf diesels tootling around Sydney drifting along the horizon at Wollongong.
Glad to be not immersed in it up there in Sydney.

Some one has done a back of the envelope calculation proportioning a certain percentage of pollution induced death on the VW illegalities.

www.vox.com/2015/9/23/9383641/volkswagen-scandal-pollution

"
Using these figures, the extra pollution from Volkswagen's US cars can be expected to lead to an additional 5 to 27 premature deaths per year. If we extrapolated worldwide to all 11 million vehicles, that would come to somewhere between 74 and 404 premature deaths each year.***"

ikw777
QLD, 2995 posts
6 Oct 2015 7:47PM
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This guy can be entertaining and insightful.

petermac33
WA, 6415 posts
6 Oct 2015 6:10PM
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Two big reasons why Volkswagen got busted:1. They produced the world's most fuel efficient cars, and when the XL1 hit production, represented a huge threat to the climate change scam. Think about it - if all of a sudden fuel economy increased even 5x, (rather than the 10X the XL1 did) it would destroy the entire notion of us destroying the planet by driving.

Consider this: The biggest threat the climate hoaxers claim is CO2. Volkswagen cut that in half with the TDI, in part by breaking the emission system rules that would make it impossible to do if followed. Volkswagen proved the emission standards and systems are a scam that is feeding the climate change hoax. How would a powerful elite climate hoaxer respond to being exposed?2. They were about to release an electric car, at full production levels, that would destroy the Tesla with a cheaper price, better range, and lower operating cost.

Additionally, they evidently had a way to do a 15 minute full charge and an infrastructure plan to deliver it. That would cost what? $15 - 20 billion to do, approximately the amount of that fine? BINGO: Volkswagen was about to invest $22 billion Euros into electric car manufacturing in China! That's way too close to the amount of that fine! DING DING DING! Now all the news reports are saying how much the scandal benefited the electric car future, but if Volkswagen gets bashed into oblivion the moment they were about to bring it forward, what does that really say? MORE CO2 FOR EVERYONE, CARBON TAX PLEASE!


http://82.221.129.208/ah7index.html

FormulaNova
WA, 14424 posts
6 Oct 2015 6:53PM
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petermac33 said..
Two big reasons why Volkswagen got busted:1. They produced the world's most fuel efficient cars, and when the XL1 hit production, represented a huge threat to the climate change scam. Think about it - if all of a sudden fuel economy increased even 5x, (rather than the 10X the XL1 did) it would destroy the entire notion of us destroying the planet by driving.

Consider this: The biggest threat the climate hoaxers claim is CO2. Volkswagen cut that in half with the TDI, in part by breaking the emission system rules that would make it impossible to do if followed. Volkswagen proved the emission standards and systems are a scam that is feeding the climate change hoax. How would a powerful elite climate hoaxer respond to being exposed?2. They were about to release an electric car, at full production levels, that would destroy the Tesla with a cheaper price, better range, and lower operating cost.

Additionally, they evidently had a way to do a 15 minute full charge and an infrastructure plan to deliver it. That would cost what? $15 - 20 billion to do, approximately the amount of that fine? BINGO: Volkswagen was about to invest $22 billion Euros into electric car manufacturing in China! That's way too close to the amount of that fine! DING DING DING! Now all the news reports are saying how much the scandal benefited the electric car future, but if Volkswagen gets bashed into oblivion the moment they were about to bring it forward, what does that really say? MORE CO2 FOR EVERYONE, CARBON TAX PLEASE!


http://82.221.129.208/ah7index.html


Right...... Maybe you can add in 'they had a car designed to run on water' and keep a few more myths alive.

Of course, they couldn't have just fu#ked up and tried to get away with something, it was obviously a setup. Uh huh.

I guess one thing VW would have learned from this is that lots of people like them. They have (had?) a good image, so its hard to tarnish it, even with this problem.


echunda
VIC, 764 posts
6 Oct 2015 10:35PM
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ikw777 said..

This guy can be entertaining and insightful.



Sounds like he came from the school of John Laws.

What a load of insight full hogwash.

Loss of value of the VW fleet in the second hand market? - Bull. People will still want their Golf regardless of emissions. Sales will dip and quickly regain losses similar to V8's when petrol went over $1 p/ltr

6000 people die 'prematurely' from vehicle emissions? - Where did he pull such a random statistic? Which country is that related to - and if it's AUS that represents less than 4% of total deaths in 2014. Pretty low statistic. Drastically lower if any other Country (like the UK or US). I can see the ER room now "another has died from VW's emissions"




vosadrian
NSW, 367 posts
7 Oct 2015 2:15PM
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I worked in the car industry in engine management for a long time. This sort of thing is not uncommon, and I have no issues with what VW did. The truth is that the US laws for many years have been aimed at favouring US built cars with larger inefficient engines. Most emissions limits are based on % of total exhaust output. So if one car uses 10L/100km and produces an emission output of 0.9% and another car uses 5L/100km with an output of 1.1%, the first car passes a 1% limit, but the second car puts out almost half as much emissions into the atmosphere (for the same journey) and fails. They produce huge utes they call trucks with diesel engines that are like 8L capacity and spew heaps of NOx into the atmosphere but they keep the percentage of the total output below the limit and therefore they can keep selling them. They even use air pumps to pump air into the exhaust to dilute the percentage of emissions while putting the same amount of output!!

VW were required to pass a ridiculous emissions test which they did. They used some tricks to pass the test like many others do and they passed what they were required to pass deceptively, but they are paying the price more than others. If all the cars in the US were replaced with these failing VWs, the air would be much cleaner than it is now. This is more about politics and business than the safety of people. The problem is the requirements, but if they make them the way they should be half the US made cars will not be able to be sold which is not good for the US automotive industry.

The same thing happened years ago in Australia and is probably still happening. Our emission cycle test lasts for a few minutes. THe large Commodore V8s had a lean cruise mode to save fuel on long freeway trips, but it ran much leaner causing hotter combustion (which is where the efficiency comes from) which cause more Nox output. Therefore they could not start this lean cruise mode until the emissions cycle had finished after 5-10 minutes. The Nox ouptut was a bit higher and above limits, but fuel usage down, CO2 and many other outputs down. Customer happier as they get better fuel economy. Did anyone really lose?

Ian K
WA, 4048 posts
7 Oct 2015 1:51PM
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vosadrian said..


The same thing happened years ago in Australia and is probably still happening. Our emission cycle test lasts for a few minutes. THe large Commodore V8s had a lean cruise mode to save fuel on long freeway trips, but it ran much leaner causing hotter combustion (which is where the efficiency comes from) which cause more Nox output. Therefore they could not start this lean cruise mode until the emissions cycle had finished after 5-10 minutes. The Nox ouptut was a bit higher and above limits, but fuel usage down, CO2 and many other outputs down. Customer happier as they get better fuel economy. Did anyone really lose?


There is a big difference between a car that is designed around a specified test and one that is designed to detect that it is in test mode and operate to different rules.
For starters, the first is legal, the second is illegal.

The Commodore that passed the test is operating exactly the same on the test bed or with the customer out on the road. You could argue that after 10 minutes of cruise the vehicle was most likely out of congestion , Nox is now not an issue and that it's perfectly reasonable to switch to a lean burn.

I worked for a while at the vehicle testing station at Altona. Back then the test simulated a city drive with a short section of freeway thrown in. Fair enough, there was not a great need to be concerned with what cars emitted out on the highway.

Be interesting to see if any other manufacturers are found to have been criminal. The couple of examples you have given point to shortcomings of the legislation, but whatever the legislation, if you pass without being deceptive, and you can hardly call the air pump on the F100 deceptive, then it's all legal.

d1
WA, 304 posts
7 Oct 2015 5:44PM
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vosadrian said..
I worked in the car industry in engine management for a long time. This sort of thing is not uncommon, and I have no issues with what VW did. The truth is that the US laws for many years have been aimed at favouring US built cars with larger inefficient engines. Most emissions limits are based on % of total exhaust output. So if one car uses 10L/100km and produces an emission output of 0.9% and another car uses 5L/100km with an output of 1.1%, the first car passes a 1% limit, but the second car puts out almost half as much emissions into the atmosphere (for the same journey) and fails.


Thumbs up for attempting to start a new conspiracy.

However, both CARB and the US BIN/Tier Federal NOx emissions are in grams per mile (g/mi):

CARB: dieselnet.com/standards/us/ld_ca.php
Federal: www.dieselnet.com/standards/us/ld_t2.php

Oh, I remembered I also worked in the German car industry many years ago. Embedded software development for engine management systems. First job, in fact. Not at VW, but I fully understand the PRESSURE that the engineers were placed under to make a hopeless engine deliver the goods. Embedded software in VW is very colourful lately: DSG software - plain dangerous; initial Tuareg CAN software - tested by the customers; TDI control software - fraudulent; ABS software that fully releases the braking pressure when one wheel gets lifted by tiny ramps on the road - oops, sorry this story hasn't broken yet, and I don't want to be the first to receive a lawyers letter from VW.

kk
WA, 947 posts
7 Oct 2015 7:28PM
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I keep reading this thread because I find it funny how easily people become outraged.

Such a first world debate........

vosadrian
NSW, 367 posts
8 Oct 2015 9:17AM
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I've been out of the auto industry for about 10 years now, and I don't know all the exact details of what VW did and whether it is more deceptive than air pumps and lean cruise mode, but I can say that manufacturers have been doing this (either obviously or deceptively) for years and there are a lot more than VW doing it now. They have to pass a test to sell a car. There is no requirement that cars are tested in other conditions other than the specified test. Any engineer is going to concentrate their efforts on passing the prescribed test. I am an electrical engineer in another regulated industry now. I engineer my products to pass my regulation tests (among many other things).... outside of the test ranges, I do not put any engineering effort in. I don't try to make them bad outside of testing, but people want products as cheap as possible so why would I spend more money and increase product cost to do more than required. I realise VW have knowingly made more emissions outside of test conditions, and I can see why people feel deceived, but I am questioning the relevancy of the test to real world environmental problems.

My main point was that people are going on about how they have been deceived and how irresponsible this is as it will result in deaths and added polution and yada yada. These VWs that fail these tests are VERY clean emissions vehicles even outside the limits. If you were to replace all of the most popular vehicle in the US over the last few years with these VWs, the overall emissions would be much reduced. So my issue is that people call VW evil because of what it has done, yet people do not see the hypocrisy in the rules that allow millions of cars that are far more damaging to be sold responsibly with no issue.

How about we compare the emissions output of the most popular diesel vehicle sold in the USA to these VWs and see which is more dangerous for the environment and our health?

For the record, I am no VW fan. I owned an Audi and vowed never to buy a VW subsidiary product again. I just see that this issue is being misrepresented in the actual real world effect, and lots of manufacturers of far worse cars (in terms of emissions) will be the prime beneficiaries and the environment will be worse because of it. I don't care about the legal deception. Many other popular models are doing the same and it is just not public knowledge. Happens all the time in many industries and does not change the real world in any way. I do have a bit of an issue with large wasteful engines that are low on technology but the rules are made to enable them to keep selling them as the market wants them and that is what the major suppliers know how to make best.


Hunter S
WA, 516 posts
8 Oct 2015 10:48AM
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^^^^ Great to finally read some sensible commentary Vosadrian.

I'm no VW fan - my wife drives one - but there are clearly plenty of worse polluters on the road.

Ian K
WA, 4048 posts
8 Oct 2015 12:45PM
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kk said..
I keep reading this thread because I find it funny how easily people become outraged.

Such a first world debate........




I keep reading this thread out of amazement at how many people have no concept of the difference between legal and illegal! Arguments to the effect that if the regulation is flawed it's OK to flaunt it!

As to the first world. There's a few theories as to the most critical step in us getting to the first world. Was it sewerage? Was it the scientists and engineers, the industrial revolution, was it slavery, was it the extraction of fossil fuel energy, or was it the establishment of laws, regulations and a means of enforcing them? I'd put the last right up there. And it doesn't really matter that the laws aren't perfect, the main thing is that, faults and all, they are adhered to or enforced.

But I suppose nothing unusual about most of us thinking this way. That's why first world countries have the better Police forces. That's why it's a first world debate. Just wait till the legal eagles get wound up. VW will pay. It's going to be interesting.

d1
WA, 304 posts
8 Oct 2015 5:13PM
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vosadrian said..
I've been out of the auto industry for about 10 years now, and I don't know all the exact details of what VW did and whether it is more deceptive than air pumps and lean cruise mode, but I can say that manufacturers have been doing this (either obviously or deceptively) for years and there are a lot more than VW doing it now. They have to pass a test to sell a car. There is no requirement that cars are tested in other conditions other than the specified test. Any engineer is going to concentrate their efforts on passing the prescribed test. I am an electrical engineer in another regulated industry now. I engineer my products to pass my regulation tests (among many other things).... outside of the test ranges, I do not put any engineering effort in.


You make your viewpoint clear, but here is how someone else might see it.

As a Professional Engineer here, one is bound to the Engineers Australia Code of Ethics ( https://www.engineersaustralia.org.au//sites/default/files/shado/About%20Us/Overview/Governance/codeofethics2010.pdf )

It's only one page long and only contains 4 main headings. Heading 4 reads:

4. Promote sustainability
4.1 Engage responsibly with the community and other stakeholders
4.2 Practise engineering to foster the health, safety and wellbeing of the community and the environment
4.3 Balance the needs of the present with the needs of future generations

So perhaps it is a good idea, for a Professional Engineer, to put a bit of extra effort besides just meeting the test KPIs. And due to this, VW's behaviour was extremely unprofessional. I used to drive their cars too, but their poor quality software over the last few years, combined with complete lack of engineering ethics, have broken the trust. And no, it is not an industry-wide problem - other diesel-promoting manufacturers saw the dead end and chose the "unpopular" SCR over the "easy" VW diesel-flush NOx adsorber.

PS, extract from the massive German Engineering Ethics code, no need to translate, reads the same as EA's paragraph above:

Ingenieurinnen und Ingenieure sind sich der Einbettung technischer Systeme in gesellschaftliche, ökonomische und ökologische Zusammenhänge bewußt und berücksichtigen entsprechende Kriterien bei der Technikgestaltung, die auch die Handlungsbedingungen künftiger Generationen achtet: Funktionsfähigkeit, Wirtschaftlichkeit, Wohlstand, Sicherheit, Gesundheit, Umweltqualität, Persönlichkeits-entfaltung und Gesellschaftsqualität (VDI 3780).

vosadrian
NSW, 367 posts
9 Oct 2015 8:41AM
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Are you serious D1.... Now I am unethical?

Wow!! You have no idea about my work. Most markets that engineers make products for are more competitive than ever and very cost driven. Over engineering is a great way to price your product our of the market and cause a good company to go broke which probably just results in one less good product to compete with the bad products on the market which is worse for consumers. That does not mean we do not meet regulative requirements, but do we spend extra to go beyond them? I have tested products from my competitors and it was clear to me that they have a much more relaxed interpretation of some regulations than I do. As a result they are saving several % in costs that I pay when I compete with them. I would say my company is very ethical as we choose to interpret regulations in the worst case, but we do not purposely go beyond them.

I do not know the details of whether VW actually met their requirement. Was the requirement that they pass the test, or was it more than that? It sounds like they were deceptive either way, but maybe the regulations should be more clear. Either way, other than the legalistic argument, there is zero real world effect of this deception (except may a positive one). If a few consumers bought a polluting VW instead of a regulation meeting Ford F150 because of the increased economy and performance of the VW due to the increased emissions output, then the worlds air is in a better place.

As to the legalistic argument of right vs wrong.... well I think the legal system has a lot to answer for. Does the legal system treat all equally? Is a major cause of the wealth divide in society the legal system, or is it just that the wealthy know better how to use it to their advantage. Is it any coincidence that most people working within the legal system fall well in the wealthy end of the social divide? When VW pays for their error, what field of work is going to get a large chunk of the payment?



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Forums > General Discussion   Shooting the breeze...


"Volkswagen’s diesel scandal" started by Ted the Kiwi