U.S. is reportedly probing another Tesla crash over the carmaker's autopilot feature

Los Angeles Times 

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is reportedly investigating whether Tesla Motor's autopilot feature was engaged during a non-fatal July 1 crash – what would be the agency's second inquiry into the automaker's self-driving technology in as many weeks. The wreck involved a Tesla Model X in Pennsylvania. Last week, the agency disclosed a separate investigation into a fatal crash in Florida in May that involved a Tesla Model S. The driver in that collision was using Tesla's assisted driving feature at the time of the incident, which helps motorists steer and stay in lanes. The electric car manufacturer said Wednesday in a prepared statement that it received a message from the vehicle's computer July 1 indicating a crash had occurred, but more detailed logs were never transmitted. "We have no data at this point to indicate that Autopilot was engaged or not engaged," a Tesla spokesperson said in a statement.

Duplicate Docs Excel Report

Title
None found

Similar Docs  Excel Report  more

TitleSimilaritySource
None found