Unintended =/= uncommanded.There was no unintended acceleration involved with European cars Like Audi’s during the 1980s either. After 60 minutes essentially tanked Audi sales in the United States, the NHTSA found that while the accelerator and brake were slightly closer together than in most American cars, the tearful stories were all simply people pressing the wrong pedal.
I’m much more interested in the outcome of the sensor study.
because a driver doesn’t need to hold down the brake pedal when starting a Tesla
One case of a retired CHP officer in Southern California involved a 'runaway' Toyota sedan that "would not slow down". No problems were found with the car; the accelerator had been commanded to WOT because the floor mat design involved the pedal assembly and interference resulted in a runaway.I'd be curious if any unintended acceleration case has ever not been a user error issue. Like, back with the Toyota/Prius back a few years ago.
Engineering should take care to remember that the people driving the cars are humans. And humans are pretty dumb.Is this, uh, a joke? The driver may press the accelerator instead of the brake, and that would be Tesla's fault?
Am I missing something here? If someone cannot be trusted to not be confused by the pedals before starting their cars, I don't see how I would trust them on the road...
If your muscle memory from years of driving is to jump in, mash the brake pedal and punching the start button, with no danger if you get it wrong?Is this, uh, a joke? The driver may press the accelerator instead of the brake, and that would be Tesla's fault?
Am I missing something here? If someone cannot be trusted to not be confused by the pedals before starting their cars, I don't see how I would trust them on the road...
How often have you made that mistake while driving? How often have you hit the accelerator when you wanted to brake? How often have you put your car in drive in your garage rather than reverse? And if you did, did you blame the car?So what you’re saying is that you’ve never had an incident where you have confused one thing for another? Gosh, what’s it like to be “perfect”?![]()
You don't "start" a Tesla. It's on before you open the door.Essentially, because a driver doesn’t need to hold down the brake pedal when starting a Tesla
Do you have a Tesla? Because I do, and through all the OTA updates in the five years I've owned it, it's consistently not been possible to put it in drive without pressing the brake pedal.You can put it in drive without pressing brake pedal. Then you hit the accelerator one as if it is a brake and you have a flying off car.
In response to unintended acceleration claims in the 1980s, Audi developed the shift lock mechanism that prevents shifting into a drive gear from park or neutral unless a driver has a foot firmly on the brake.I don't get what this is supposed to refer to, because on its face it's false. The car beeps at you if you're in park and pushing the accelerator (and it won't move when you do that); it beeps at you if you try to put it in park and you don't have your foot on the brake.
You can put it in drive without pressing brake pedal. Then you hit the accelerator one as if it is a brake and you have a flying off car.
Thanks - a good point. Of course, I -intended- to write uncommanded.Unintended =/= uncommanded.
If someone presses the accelerator instead of the brake by mistake, the resulting acceleration may be commanded but it's still very much unintended.
Essentially, because a driver doesn’t need to hold down the brake pedal when starting a Tesla, its driver might put a foot on the accelerator by mistake, Lakafossis claimed, thus explaining about 200 incidents in which Teslas have crashed into garage walls or other parked cars. But as Lakfaossis noted in his petition, NHTSA has already determined that all of those crashes were driver error, and that’s the case today as well.
But that's also true of 2- or 3-pedal driving. People pushing the accelerator thinking they have their foot on the brake is nothing new, and certainly not limited to EVs.One-pedal driving is amazing but over time people forget how to brake and just hit the pedal they're used to without realising it's the wrong one.
Can you 'start' a Tesla without holding down the brake pedal?You can put it in drive without pressing brake pedal. Then you hit the accelerator one as if it is a brake and you have a flying off car.
Plenty of cases of Tesla owners mistaking the accelerator for the brake. Including an infamous crash in Guangdong China where two people were killed by a speeding Tesla whose clueless driver spent two kilometres with their foot mashed into the accelerator pedal.
Edit: video is age restricted and confronting.
View: https://m.youtube.com/shorts/HkGRo9N9L34
One-pedal driving is amazing but over time people forget how to brake and just hit the pedal they're used to without realising it's the wrong one.
So, the car should not move forward if it's in Drive and you press the gas pedal? When should the car move forward then?Engineering should take care to remember that the people driving the cars are humans. And humans are pretty dumb.
That said, we also haven't come up with a better solution than the two pedals despite having started trying out control methods well over a century ago.
I don't get what this is supposed to refer to, because on its face it's false. The car beeps at you if you're in park and pushing the accelerator (and it won't move when you do that); it beeps at you if you try to put it in park and you don't have your foot on the brake.
God no. I'm European, I don't own a car because we have public transport.Do you have a Tesla? Because I do, and through all the OTA updates in the five years I've owned it, it's consistently not been possible to put it in drive without pressing the brake pedal.
I guess the issue here is that the usual reason for "unintended acceleration" (or easy roll over) claims is the US industry trying to keep out or harm foreign competition, and if it is directed against a US company it is unfair.There was no unintended acceleration involved with European cars Like Audis during the 1980s either. After 60 minutes essentially tanked Audi sales in the United States, the NHTSA found that while the accelerator and brake were slightly closer together than in most American cars, the tearful stories were all simply people pressing the wrong pedal.
I’m much more interested in the outcome of the sensor study.
Edit: Punctuation
This exactly. I've had a Tesla for 8 years now, and at no point have I been able to put it into gear without having to first have my foot on the brake pedal. For all the legitimate complaints about how Teslas work, this is one area where they do actually ensure that you have your foot on the correct pedal before you can do anything at all.I don't get what this is supposed to refer to, because on its face it's false. The car beeps at you if you're in park and pushing the accelerator (and it won't move when you do that); it beeps at you if you try to put it in park and you don't have your foot on the brake.
Reminds me of back in the 1990s when our managing director was a manual only everything else sucks guy. The fleet manager persuaded him to try my auto Scorpio as he was trying to get an auto-only fleet.Can you 'start' a Tesla without holding down the brake pedal?
In my i4 for instance if you press the start button without holding down the brake pedal you turn on all the electronics, you can use the sound system etc, but you cannot actually go anywhere because it's like an ICE car where you've turned on the battery stuff but the engine is still off.
BMW requires you to hold down the brake pedal while hitting start to actually go into driving mode.
Which is so incredibly normal to me I don't even give it a second thought, and also feels like a pretty good idea. But Tesla does like to break conventions, so it wouldn't shock me to hear they ignore that concept.
You ever think maybe things are a -little- too convenient?I think in the newer Tesla with Auto Shift turned on, if you press the accelerator while in park you’re confirming the auto shift choice. ie. You don’t need to press brake to get out of P.
Which one -- the finding that acting like other cars in this specific instance doesn't warrant changing anything? Or the finding that FSD needs to enter engineering analysis?This is what $291 million on the Trump campaign gets you.
I used to drive a manual, and I'm sympathetic to the brain shift switching between 3 and 2 pedal cars requires. I remember once stabbing for a non-existent clutch in my wife's automatic in a mild panic thinking I was about to stall the engine as I came to a stop. Muscle memory can be like that.Reminds me of back in the 1990s when our managing director was a manual only everything else sucks guy. The fleet manager persuaded him to try my auto Scorpio as he was trying to get an auto-only fleet.
The MD apparently erupted in fury when he couldn't get it to start because he had missed the "foot on the brake" instruction. And somehow despite my having been in my office all morning it was my fault.
tesla requires a foot on the brake to shift into drive or reverse.Can you 'start' a Tesla without holding down the brake pedal?
In my i4 for instance if you press the start button without holding down the brake pedal you turn on all the electronics, you can use the sound system etc, but you cannot actually go anywhere because it's like an ICE car where you've turned on the battery stuff but the engine is still off.
BMW requires you to hold down the brake pedal while hitting start to actually go into driving mode.
Which is so incredibly normal to me I don't even give it a second thought, and also feels like a pretty good idea. But Tesla does like to break conventions, so it wouldn't shock me to hear they ignore that concept.
Okay so it's pretty normal still. That's good.tesla requires a foot on the brake to shift into drive or reverse.
you can shift into park without a foot on the brake. even opening the driver door puts it in park.
I have a relevant anecdote from my Ioniq 6. I was backing up around a corner feathering the throttle pedal like you would do in a gas car with the brake pedal to control speed. The car detected an imminent collision with a trash can in front of me (that wasn't going to happen... the I6's packing/collision detection system is trash) and did a full fledged BEEPBEEPBEEP and it automatically slammed on the brakes. Some instinct kicked in and I floored the throttle (presumably because instinct thought it was the brake because that's what pedal my foot normally would have been on.) As the car was still in it's emergency brake mode it didn't go anywhere... until 3 seconds later when it determined I was no longer at risk of hitting the trashcan, released the brake, and I accelerated backwards at full acceleration because my foot was still hard on the floor on the wrong pedal.How often have you made that mistake while driving? How often have you hit the accelerator when you wanted to brake? How often have you put your car in drive in your garage rather than reverse? And if you did, did you blame the car?
There's "confuse" and then there's "confuse".
I said something similar to the judge when I ran a red light. He didn't buy it.So what you’re saying is that you’ve never had an incident where you have confused one thing for another? Gosh, what’s it like to be “perfect”?![]()
MYbe it was trying to argue about human factors in design.Is this, uh, a joke? The driver may press the accelerator instead of the brake, and that would be Tesla's fault?
Am I missing something here? If someone cannot be trusted to not be confused by the pedals before starting their cars, I don't see how I would trust them on the road...