Dayton Daily News

U.S. investigat­es Tesla for steering wheels that can detach on the road

- By Tom Krisher and Michelle Chapman

U.S. auto safety regulators have opened an investigat­ion into Tesla’s Model Y SUV after getting two complaints that the steering wheels can come off while being driven.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion says the probe covers an estimated 120,000 vehicles from the 2023 model year.

The agency says in both cases the Model Ys were delivered to customers with a missing bolt that holds the wheel to the steering column. A friction fit held the steering wheels on, but they separated when force was exerted while the SUVs were being driven.

The agency says in doc- uments posted on its website Wednesday that both incidents happened while the SUVs had low mileage on them.

In one complaint filed with NHTSA, an owner said he was driving with his family on Route 1 in Woodbridge, New Jersey, when the steering wheel suddenly came off on Jan. 29, five days after the vehicle was purchased. The owner wrote that there were no cars behind him, and he was able to pull toward the road divider. There were no injuries.

“It was a horrible expe- rience, I was driving back from mall with family and in middle of freeway steer- ing wheel fell off,” said Prerak Patel. “I was on left lane when this happened, I can’t move my car to left or right.

However I was lucky that road was straight and able to stop my car at the divider.”

Messages were left seeking comment from Tesla, which has disbanded its media relations department.

At first a Tesla service center gave Patel a cost estimate of $103.96 to repair the problem. The service center apologized in what appear to be text messages posted on Twitter.

When Patel wrote that he had lost faith in Tesla and asked for a refund, the service center removed the charge and wrote that Tesla doesn’t have a return policy, but he could reach out to the sales and delivery team.

Patel was later given the option of keeping the car or getting it replaced with a new one, he said, and Patel chose to do so.

Patel said he’s a fan of Tesla CEO Elon Musk and has invested a large chunk of his savings in the stock, which fell 3% Wednesday.

“My kids were a little scared to ride in a loaner Tesla and, as a parent, we are able to restore their confidence,” Patel said. “My family is fine now and hope Tesla will investigat­e and improve its (quality control) so no other family experience what we experience­d.”

The latest NHTSA investigat­ion adds to a long string of problems that Tesla is having with the U.S. road safety agency. In the past three years it has opened investigat­ions of Tesla’s “Autopilot” driver-assist system crashing into parked emergency vehicles, and problems with suspension­s.

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