US Safety Agency Criticises Tesla Crash Data Release
The
US National Transportation Safety Board said on Sunday it was
"unhappy" that electric car maker Tesla made
public information about the crash of
its Model X vehicle on Autopilot that killed the driver last month.
The agency
"needs the cooperation of Tesla to decode the data the vehicle
recorded," NTSB spokesman Chris O'Neil said in a statement. "In each
of our investigations involving a Tesla vehicle, Tesla has been extremely
cooperative on assisting with the vehicle data".
"However,
the NTSB is unhappy with the release of investigative information by
Tesla," he added.
A Tesla
spokesperson declined to comment. The board's
reaction to Tesla was first reported by the Washington Post Sunday evening. O'Neil was
responding to Tesla's announcement on Friday that the Tesla Model X involved in
the crash had activated its Autopilot system moments before the March 23
mishap.
The driver, 38,
died at a nearby hospital shortly after the vehicle hit a concrete highway
divider near Mountain View, California. The mishap involved two other vehicles.
"The NTSB
is looking into all aspects of this crash including the driver's previous
concerns about the autopilot," said O'Neil. "We will work to
determine the probable cause of the crash and our next update of information
about our investigation will likely be when we publish a preliminary report,
which generally occurs within a few weeks of completion of field work."
Last week, the
company said that a search of its service records did not "find anything
suggesting that the customer ever complained to Tesla about the performance of
Autopilot. There was a concern raised once about navigation not working
correctly, but Autopilot's performance is unrelated to navigation."
In its
announcement on Friday, the company said that shortly before the crash, the
vehicle's "Autopilot was engaged with the adaptive cruise control
follow-distance set to minimum."
Autopilot allows
drivers to take their hands off the wheel for extended periods under certain
conditions. Tesla requires users to agree to keep their hands on the wheel at
all times before they can use Autopilot. Users, however, routinely brag they
can use the system to drive hands-free.
In its Friday
statement, Tesla also said vehicle logs from the accident showed no action had
been taken by the driver right before the crash and that he had received
earlier warnings to put his hands on the wheel.
The statement
did not say why the Autopilot system apparently did not detect the concrete
divider
US Safety Agency Criticises Tesla Crash Data Release
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