Los Angeles Times

Tesla denies Model S woes

The electric car company also disputes claims that it asked drivers not to talk to federal regulators.

- By Alex Schiffer alex.schiffer@latimes.com

The electric car company also disputes claims that it asked drivers not to talk to federal regulators.

Tesla Motors Inc., the auto industry’s enfant terrible, found itself in a tussle with federal safety regulators, a car blogger and a driver over potential problems with its mainstay electric sedan.

The company fired back at allegation­s of suspension problems on its Model S and disputed claims that it asked customers to sign agreements not to talk to federal regulators.

However, Bloomberg reported Friday that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion said Tesla had revised its “Goodwill Agreements” to make clear that customers were free to report safety concerns to regulators.

A day earlier, the Palo Alto-based electric car company had posted on its website a statement saying there are no safety defects with the car and that it has cooperated fully with NHTSA since the agency inquired about the car’s suspension­s on April 20.

The agency said Thursday that it was “examining a potential suspension issue on the Tesla Model S, and is seeking additional informatio­n from vehicle owners and the company.”

Tesla said that because it owns all its service centers, it’s aware of every incident or repair.

“Whenever there is even a potential issue with one of those parts, we investigat­e fully,” Tesla said. “This, combined with extensive durability testing, gives us high confidence in our suspension­s.”

Tesla said the car at the root of the allegation­s experience­d abnormal rust in its suspension ball joint, something the company has never seen before.

On Thursday, NHTSA indicated that some owners had been asked to sign nondisclos­ure agreements about their concerns, which the agency called “troublesom­e.”

A driver on the Tesla Motors Club online forum posted a legal document titled “Goodwill Agreement & Release” stating, among other things, that in return for the company providing parts, service and other compensati­on the signer agrees “to keep confidenti­al our provision of the Goodwill, the terms of this agreement and the incidents or claims leading or relating” to it.

Tesla denied the suggestion that it prevented customers from speaking with government agencies, calling the claim “prepostero­us.” Nonetheles­s, it said it would review the agreement language.

Tesla said it often picks up the tab on repairs that aren’t covered under its warranty.

“When this happens, we sometimes ask our customers to sign a ‘Goodwill Agreement,’ ” Tesla said. “The basic point is to ensure that Tesla doesn’t do a good deed, only to have that used against us in court for further gain.”

Michelle Krebs, a senior analyst for AutoTrader, said that if other such agreements exist in the auto industry, they aren’t common practice.

“Tesla is doing things its own way on a lot of fronts,” she said. “It’s not using the franchise dealer system, it’s selling to people directly. It’s sort of challengin­g traditiona­l practices in the industry. Whether it’s appropriat­e, that’s to be determined.”

Edward Niedermeye­r, the blog poster who initiated the complaints on the Model S suspension, took to Twitter to reply to Tesla and directly call out company Chief Executive Elon Musk.

Tesla said the car, owned by Peter Cordaro, 61, of Connellsvi­lle, Pa., has more than 70,000 miles on it and needed two tow trucks to take it to the service center, one to get it from the dirt road he lives on to the highway, and another to take it from the highway to the service center.

Cordaro told The Times on Friday that he was “appalled” at Tesla’s response and that its reporting of the situation was inaccurate.

“I can’t believe Tesla would make such an outrageous statement that I live on a dirt road when all they had to do was Google Earth my address which they certainly have in their system and see that I live on an asphalt road in the city of Collinsvil­le,” he said. “Nowhere going to or from my house is there a dirt road by my house.”

A Google Earth search of Cordaro’s address by The Times confirmed that he lives on an asphalt road and that it appears there are no dirt roads nearby.

Cordaro said he’s driven his car on dirt roads at most 10 times in the three years he’s had it. He also added that Tesla’s descriptio­n of its goodwill agreement, which he did sign, is “accurate.”

Tesla’s stock fell Friday, closing down $10.57 to $218.79, or 4.6%.

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