DOT investigating fatal crash in which self-driving car slammed into tractor-trailer The dash of a Tesla Model S.
The U.S. DOT announced last week its investigating a fatal Florida crash in which a Tesla Model S driving in the vehicles self-driving Autopilot mode failed to brake and slammed into the side of a Class 8 tractor-trailer, killing the occupant of the Tesla. Tesla vehicles are all-electric sedans that can operate in semi-autonomous modes in certain situations.
The truck involved in the crash pulled in front of the Tesla to take a left across a divided highway. The Teslas Autopilot system failed to brake to avoid the collision and drove underneath the trucks trailer. The trailers white side
against a brightly lit sky caused the cars Autopilot system to fail to register the full-sized tractor-trailer crossing the highway, Tesla said in a blog post on its site.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administrations Office of Defects has announced an inquiry into the fatal crash, which took place in early May.
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Tesla says its Autopilot system is still in public beta testing, and users are warned before using the system that the technology is new and that drivers should not take their hands off the wheel. When drivers active Autopilot, the acknowledgment box explains, among other things, that Autopilot is an assist feature that requires you to keep your hands on the steering wheel at all times, and that you need to maintain control and responsibility for your vehicle while using it, Tesla writes in its blog.
Reports indicate the 40-year-old driver of the Tesla, Joshua Brown, was watching a movie at the time of the crash, but not via Teslas in-dash entertainment system.
Tesla says this is the first fatal accident in more than 130 million miles of Autopilot testing well above the U.S. average of 1 death per 90 million miles and the worldwide average of one death per 60 million miles.
Poster Comment:
This involved a self driving car, but Ive also posted many times how these hype stories are completely bogus, as admitted by Mercedes itself, who makes the so called self driving trucks. The manufacturers themselves admit that the so-called 'self driving' trucks were never and will never be operated without a driver.