My guess was that the limiter exists because it is required in some non-U.S. countries, so it was easy to make it optional in the U.S. firmware.Sorry.. I fail to see how Tesla owes this family anything. Their 18 year old son got into a car with somebody else and was killed while the vehicle was driving at excess speeds. I can however understand the Rileys sueing for negligence if they truly removed the limiter. I'm not an expert on batteries in cars and the safety regulations, but I am assuming that the car has passed whatever federal regulations that are required to sell in the US.
The limiter is not a US federal requirement. It's a way to preserve the vehicle during test drives or provide a 'feel good' feature for parents who (for some reason) are letting their teenagers drive cars with 400+hp.
How would a company be negligent in removing a limiter, even if they didn't tell anyone?
I believe the legal theory goes, that if the owner of the car had known that the regulator was not operational, they would not have loaned the car, and thus there would have been no accident. If they can sell that theory, that would show blame at Tesla.Sorry.. I fail to see how Tesla owes this family anything. Their 18 year old son got into a car with somebody else and was killed while the vehicle was being driven at excess speeds. I can however understand the Rileys sueing for negligence if they truly removed the limiter. I'm not an expert on batteries in cars and the safety regulations, but I am assuming that the car has passed whatever federal regulations that are required to sell in the US.
They were both 18, legally adults, responsible for their own destiny.
Neither Tesla, the service center or their parents are responsible.
Any judge or potential jury should shed tears for the tragedy and pain here, but otherwise laugh the money grabbers out of the court room.
Embracing personal responsibility is one of the best ways to prevent tragedy. Likewise, embracing stupidity, is one of the best ways to perpetuate tragedy.
They were both 18, legally adults, responsible for their own destiny.
Neither Tesla, the service center or their parents are responsible.
Any judge or potential jury should shed tears for the tragedy and pain here, but otherwise laugh the money grabbers out of the court room.
Embracing personal responsibility is one of the best ways to prevent tragedy. Likewise, embracing stupidity, is one of the best ways to perpetuate tragedy.
There's no way Barrett Riley could have been responsible for driving like a complete ass and risking his own life, his passenger's life, and the lives of anybody he happened to crash into at insane speeds. After all, given his parents' completely idiotic parenting instincts, he clearly was suffering from affluenza. /s
I would more likely believe there was some sort of firmware upgrade that caused some things to be reset to defaults (i.e. no governor). Why would they disable it intentionally? Arguably, that is the very definition of "negligence", but as no such safety mechanism is required by law, it is negligence only potentially in breach of contract, and not in any criminal fashion.
No, thats Fruit stands. But only in Hong Kong....If TV is to be trusted, and I see no reason it should not be, all cars erupt into great fireballs on collision, with pieces of the car body flying in all directions.
This "governor" speed limiter issue sounds like a load of crap for their case... Similar to some of the anti-gun people out there who say no one NEEDS a gun, well no one NEEDS a car that goes over 70mph; but tens, if not hundreds of millions of them are sold every year.
Its not cruise control, its the maximum speed of the vehicle.Irrespective of the liability, the chain of argument here doesn't follow...If 110 is an insane speed and death doing 85 is almost as likely an outcome from a crash...
Then HTF do you justify allowing cruise control speed to be set to 85?
I can't imagine a crash then a battery fire. I'm imaging that video you often see of someone poking a lithium ion-battery and it explodes with a geyser of fire. Terrible way to go.
Why you'd put the max at 85 makes no sense to me.
That seems to me to be the only allegation with any merit. The rest is hyperbole and generally meritless. No car company can protect passengers from the egregious stupidity of the driver.A very sad accident.
There aren't a lot of vehicles out there that are going to protect you enough at 116mph.
Tesla definitely shouldn't have removed the limiter without their permission though.
Who knew you're more likely to have an accident at high speed? This speed thing is really really hard.
I believe the legal theory goes, that if the owner of the car had known that the regulator was not operational, they would not have loaned the car, and thus there would have been no accident. If they can sell that theory, that would show blame at Tesla.Sorry.. I fail to see how Tesla owes this family anything. Their 18 year old son got into a car with somebody else and was killed while the vehicle was being driven at excess speeds. I can however understand the Rileys sueing for negligence if they truly removed the limiter. I'm not an expert on batteries in cars and the safety regulations, but I am assuming that the car has passed whatever federal regulations that are required to sell in the US.
I think this argument of causation a stretch at best. Regulator or no, the driver could have chosen to drive at a reasonable speed and thus avoid an accident, he did not choose to do so.
Its not cruise control, its the maximum speed of the vehicle.Irrespective of the liability, the chain of argument here doesn't follow...If 110 is an insane speed and death doing 85 is almost as likely an outcome from a crash...
Then HTF do you justify allowing cruise control speed to be set to 85?
I find that choice odd myself. Commercial Vehicles in the UK frequently have signs on the back saying they are limited to a speed between 55 and 65 (depending on the vehicle). Why you'd put the max at 85 makes no sense to me.
Depends on the state, municipality, and possibly circumstances.Non-American here, but if you're caught doing 112mph how do you keep your license? In Australia ~15mph will get you a 3 month suspension.
Depends on the state, municipality, and possibly circumstances.Non-American here, but if you're caught doing 112mph how do you keep your license? In Australia ~15mph will get you a 3 month suspension.
I think a lot of states, rather than saying something like "if you're going X mph over you get suspended", have a catch-all "reckless driving" rule. So if you're driving particularly stupidly--be it speeding, driving too slow, DWI, weaving, poorly-secured load, whatever--they just slap that on and try to get your license suspended.
I think Montana used to have no daytime highway speed limit, but a 65mph nighttime speed limit. AFAIK, it's got a 70 or 75mph daytime limit now.Depends on the state, municipality, and possibly circumstances.Non-American here, but if you're caught doing 112mph how do you keep your license? In Australia ~15mph will get you a 3 month suspension.
I think a lot of states, rather than saying something like "if you're going X mph over you get suspended", have a catch-all "reckless driving" rule. So if you're driving particularly stupidly--be it speeding, driving too slow, DWI, weaving, poorly-secured load, whatever--they just slap that on and try to get your license suspended.
This. In Virginia the law makes anything over 80 an automatic reckless ticket, as well as anything 20+ over. From 1-19 over it's the officer's discretion; generally speaking up to 10 over is safe, 12-15 and they start pulling people over. Though I have heard of tickets for 26 in a 25 in a couple of jurisdictions...
Also, isn't it Montana that has *no* speed limit on its highways at night time?
Because it wasn't the kid's fault he was speeding, it was someone else' for having a car that let them drive that fast!Why the hell would you let a kid who already got caught doing 112mph continue driving?
Except the parents of the son driving the car are extraordinary wealthy, so I'm not thinking greed has much to do with it. Just grieving parents that are looking to point the finger at someone else.Another day, another greedy lawsuit hoping to roll a technologically-incompetent jury to dupe.
Unless discovery uncovers some kind of bombshell on the speed limiter part, there's not much difference between this and blaming Tesla's "autopilot" for the actions of deliberately negligent drivers.
This happens often where kids make unfortunate choices and then end up losing their lives. Then parents want laws changed to protect kids, it's just a way of dealing with their grief.
Those that belittle them have character flaws of their own.
Because it wasn't the kid's fault he was speeding, it was someone else' for having a car that let them drive that fast!Why the hell would you let a kid who already got caught doing 112mph continue driving?
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I am not grasping how the Rileys realistically thinks they have a case.Two months after being ticketed for driving 112 mph in a 50 mph zone, Barrett Riley had the same Tesla Model S at 116 mph three seconds before the May 8 flaming crash that killed him and Edgar Monserratt Martinez on Fort Lauderdale's Seabreeze Boulevard.
As for the battery that caught on fire, the (NTSB) report says, "Small portions of the lithium-ion high-voltage battery had separated from the vehicle, and — though there was no visible fire — (Fort Lauderdale Fire Department) applied water and foam to the debris.
"During the loading of the car for removal from the scene, the battery reignited and was quickly extinguished. Upon arrival at the storage yard, the battery reignited again. A local fire department responded to the storage yard and extinguished the fire."
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The speed limit is 30 mph on Seabreeze Boulevard. As southbound drivers approach a left curve near the 1300 block, a sign with a flashing light advises to take the curve at 25 mph.
People who want to hold others legally liable when they fail at parenting deserve to be belittled.Except the parents of the son driving the car are extraordinary wealthy, so I'm not thinking greed has much to do with it. Just grieving parents that are looking to point the finger at someone else.
This happens often where kids make unfortunate choices and then end up losing their lives. Then parents want laws changed to protect kids, it's just a way of dealing with their grief.
Those that belittle them have character flaws of their own.
In this case, it was only a 30 mph zone and the police believe he was driving much faster and therefore, an 85 mph limit couldn’t change much.
Assuming that is what happenedA very sad accident.
There aren't a lot of vehicles out there that are going to protect you enough at 116mph.
Tesla definitely shouldn't have removed the limiter without their permission though.
Tesla has this thing where company owned cars that are used for test drives and loaners have a speed limiter set to 85 MPH. This limiter is supposed to be removed when the car is sold to someone, though there have been a few isolated cases where there was an oversight and the limit remained after the car was sold.
What I'm guessing happened is that when the owners of this particular Tesla asked for a speed limit, Tesla went ahead and triggered that code on that car. Then, later, when the car was brought in for service, some technician saw that the limit was in place and, not knowing the history and why it was in place, removed it because it's not supposed to be in place on customer cars.
I'll let the courts decide whether this actually opened Tesla to any liability.
I can't imagine a crash then a battery fire. I'm imaging that video you often see of someone poking a lithium ion-battery and it explodes with a geyser of fire. Terrible way to go.
Here's a snippet from Miami Herald
I am not grasping how the Rileys realistically thinks they have a case.Two months after being ticketed for driving 112 mph in a 50 mph zone, Barrett Riley had the same Tesla Model S at 116 mph three seconds before the May 8 flaming crash that killed him and Edgar Monserratt Martinez on Fort Lauderdale's Seabreeze Boulevard.
As for the battery that caught on fire, the (NTSB) report says, "Small portions of the lithium-ion high-voltage battery had separated from the vehicle, and — though there was no visible fire — (Fort Lauderdale Fire Department) applied water and foam to the debris.
"During the loading of the car for removal from the scene, the battery reignited and was quickly extinguished. Upon arrival at the storage yard, the battery reignited again. A local fire department responded to the storage yard and extinguished the fire."
.
.
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The speed limit is 30 mph on Seabreeze Boulevard. As southbound drivers approach a left curve near the 1300 block, a sign with a flashing light advises to take the curve at 25 mph.
The Fort Lauderdale Fire and Rescue Department arrived at the crash scene and found the
Tesla fully engulfed in flames. They extinguished the vehicle fire using 200–300 gallons of water and foam.
Non-American here, but if you're caught doing 112mph how do you keep your license? In Australia ~15mph will get you a 3 month suspension.
Anyway, hopefully Riley the younger winds up in prison. His gross negligence cost someone's life.