Tesla Self-Driving and Unintended Acceleration Not The Same Says NHTSA
Tesla vehicles that drive themselves and those that continue unintentionally are not the same, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
In a ruling sure to satisfy Teslaphiles and Muskovites, the NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigation (ODI) concluded today that after reviewing the data, ODI has no evidence that supports opening a defect investigation into sudden unintended acceleration (SUA) in Teslas. In every instance in which data was available for review by ODI, the evidence shows that crashes in the complaints have been caused by pedal misapplication. There is no evidence of any fault in the accelerator pedal assemblies, motor control systems, or brake systems that has contributed to any of the incidents. There is no evidence of a design factor contributing to pedal misapplication. The theory of a potential electronic cause of SUA is based upon inaccurate assumptions about system design and log data.
With a father who owned a dealership, I literally grew up in the business. After college, I worked for GM, Nissan and Mazda, writing articles for automotive enthusiast magazines as a side gig. I discovered you could make a living selling ad space at Four Wheeler magazine, before I moved on to selling TV for the National Hot Rod Association. After that, I started Roadhouse, a marketing, advertising and PR firm dedicated to the automotive, outdoor/apparel, and entertainment industries. Through the years, I continued writing, shooting, and editing. It keep things interesting.
More by Jason R. Sakurai
Latest Car Reviews
Read moreLatest Product Reviews
Read moreRecent Comments
- Arthur Dailey Pluses: There were reportedly only 220 of these ever imported into the USA.Minuses: Much of the car was manufactured in South Africa.Then the parts were shipped to England for assembly. As Clarkson, May and Hammond have said, I believe about these cars, 'nothing says quality like being put together by some blokes in a shed in the Midlands'.
- Lou_BC This is ironically funny. When I was in Vancouver I was sitting outside watching vehicles go by on a busy street. I noticed that like this study, most were white, black, or a shade of grey. I decided to roughly count 100 vehicles excluding work vehicles. 80 were greyscale (white - silver - greys - black). 20 were a "colour". When I look back on my vehicles, I've owned 2 blue, 2 red, 1 tu-tone teal/silver, 1 tu-tone silver/dark grey, 1 tu-tone light beige/black, and orange with gold stripping.
- Tassos MOST OF MY CARS CAME WITH DIFFERENT PAINTED PANELS FROM DIFFERENT CARS. MY EUROPEAN E-class was mostly PALE MUSTARD YELLOW BECAUSE IT USED TO BE A GERMAN TAXI (it was the cheapest one I could find and still way beyond my budget). I eventually had it painted so I COULd FIT IN WITH OTHER eastern euro VIPS.
- Astigmatism I agree about boring exterior colors, but what really gets me is that 80%+ of in-stock dealer cars appear to have black (or dark-gray) interiors; for some reason, light gray, tan, and even brown seem to be virtually special-order options. When I got my car last year, one of the reasons I passed on the Volvo plug-in hybrid - a car I actually liked - was because they told me it would be six months before they could get one in without a black interior. WTF?I ordered my car from the factory, so was able to order Portimao Blue with Oyster Dakota leather. I was upset that I couldn't order some of the prettier colors that BMW offers on its other models (the green they have on the M3 is beautiful), and BMW Individual isn't even available for the non-M3 3-series. Oh well, I did the best I could.
- Tassos ELON SHOT MY DOG ONCE BUT I still ADmire him because he STANDS FOR FREEDOm.
Comments
Join the conversation
oops!
These were fun little cars. The rental I had one time felt really sporty. I bet the ACR cars were a blast on the track.