The Palm Beach Post

Tesla Model X in Calif. crash sped up prior to impact

- By Alan Levin and Ryan Beene

The Tesla Model X that crashed in California earlier this year while being guided by its semi-autonomous driving system sped up to 71 miles an hour in the seconds before the vehicle slammed into a highway barrier, investigat­ors said Thursday.

U.S. National Transporta­tion Safety Board issued a preliminar­y report on the March 23 crash showing that the driver’s hands were detected on the steering wheel only 34 seconds during the last minute before impact.

The investigat­ion is the latest to shine a spotlight into potential flaws in emerging autonomous driving technology.

Another NTSB probe of a self-driving Uber Technologi­es Inc. car that killed a pedestrian March 18 in Arizona found that the car’s sensors picked up the victim, but the vehicle wasn’t programmed to brake for obstructio­ns.

Walter Huang, a 38-year-old engineer who worked at Apple, died in Mountain View, Calif., in the March 23 crash when his Model X struck the barrier as he was using the driver-assistance system known as Autopilot. The car’s computer didn’t sense his hands on the steering wheel for six seconds before the collision, according to NTSB.

Tesla shares, which had been up 3.3 percent, erased much of their gains on the news. The shares closed down 1.07 percent to $316.09.

The preliminar­y report didn’t include conclusion­s about what caused the crash.

“All aspects of the crash remain under investigat­ion as the NTSB determines the probable cause, with the intent of issuing safety recommenda­tions to prevent similar crashes,” the report said.

A Tesla spokeswoma­n declined to comment on the NTSB’s report and pointed to a March 30 com-

pany blog post.

In the post, the company said the driver had about five seconds and 150 meters of unobstruct­ed view of the highway barrier but took no action to avoid the collision, citing vehicle logs.

“Tesla Autopilot does not prevent all accidents — such a standard would be impossible — but it makes them much less likely to occur,” the company wrote in the post. “It unequivoca­lly makes the world safer for the vehicle occupants, pedestrian­s and cyclists.”

Huang was using Tesla’s Autopilot system continuous­ly for nearly 19 minutes prior to the crash.

The system made two visual and one auditory alert for the driver to place his hands on the steering wheel, but those occurred more than 15 minutes prior to the crash, according to the report.

The NTSB didn’t report any alerts in the moments leading up to the crash.

The Tesla was following a lead vehicle at about 65 miles per hour 8 seconds prior to the crash. A second later, the car began to steer left while still following the lead vehicle.

Four seconds before the crash it was no longer following the lead vehicle, the NTSB said.

The Model X then accelerate­d from 62 mph to 70.8 mph in the final three seconds before impact.

The Autopilot’s cruise control system, which is designed to match the speed of a slower vehicle ahead of it, was set at 75 mph.

The Tesla collided with a so-called crash attenuator, a device covering the concrete barrier that’s designed to absorb a vehicle impact to lower risks of damage and injuries.

The attenuator had been damaged 11 days earlier in a previous accident and hadn’t been repaired, according to NTSB.

The barrier is in the median of the highway where it splits into two different directions.

No pre-crash braking or evasive steering movement was detected, according to NTSB’s summary of performanc­e data recorded by the car.

While Tesla tells drivers they must keep their hands on the steering wheel and monitor the semi-autonomous system, the car can steer and control speed in some situations.

The NTSB originally announced it was looking into a fire that erupted in the car’s battery, which was damaged in the impact. The agency is also investigat­ing a May 8 fire in a fatal Tesla crash in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Once the company said that the Autopilot system was switched on in the Mountain View crash, the safety board broadened the investigat­ion to include the vehicle’s automation.

Two consumer advocacy groups charged May 23 that Tesla’s promotiona­l material on Autopilot are deceptive.

A Tesla website says its vehicles have “full self-driving hardware.”

The site also contains a video of a car navigating streets without human input with text saying “the car is driving itself.”

Tensions in the NTSB probe boiled over on April 11 when Tesla released informatio­n about the accident without first clearing it with investigat­ors, prompting the NTSB to take the unusual action of removing the car company from official participat­ion.

Tesla had issued comments blaming the driver of the Tesla SUV.

“While we understand the demand for informatio­n that parties face during an NTSB investigat­ion, uncoordina­ted releases of incomplete informatio­n do not further transporta­tion safety or serve the public interest,” NTSB Chairman Robert Sumwalt said in a statement.

Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk hung up on Sumwalt as he explained the removal, according to the NTSB chief.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tesla CEO Elon Musk introduces the Model X car in 2015. A Tesla in Autopilot mode can drive itself but it’s not a “self-driving” vehicle, at least as far as safety regulators are concerned.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS Tesla CEO Elon Musk introduces the Model X car in 2015. A Tesla in Autopilot mode can drive itself but it’s not a “self-driving” vehicle, at least as far as safety regulators are concerned.

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