"Your company has issued a number of misleading statements," NHTSA wrote to Musk.
Read the whole story
Read the whole story
The reality is that once you achieve “5 stars” or “good” you can reasonably be assured that in most real world crashes your injuries are going to be primarily airbag/seatbelt rash and deceleration related instead of having body parts broken. When you get into ones like very high speed (65mph +) crashes due to reckless or negligent (drunk) drivers, all bets are off. Nothing out there can reliably protect you from that kind of violent impact.
The weight thing is a red herring. Even if Tesla made all the technically-correct qualifications on their statement (according to NHTSA test data, within its weight class, etc.) they'd have still been in violation of NHTSA guidelines, which only allow automakers to use the star rating and specific other claims in their marketing materials. If consumers want to look up VSS scores in order to inform their purchasing decisions, the data is publically available, but it's not supposed to be used in advertisements or spec sheets.
Specifically prohibited from using and "not supposed to" are 2 different things
These same sort of loopholes allow audi & jaguar to advertise their ev's with EU mileage/ratings
which is quite short of U.S ones
This might explain in the legal response letter why the telsa lawyer did not back down.
Heh. What you're saying is, "This goes to 11."It is a fact that the Tesla Model 3 is significantly safer than other cars of similar size and weight. IMO, Tesla is fully within its rights to highlight that fact using publicly available NHTSA data.
Only allowing Tesla to advertise "5 stars", when it's vehicles are actually far safer than competing "5 star" rated vehicles, largely defeats the point of the NHTSA tests - to encourage auto makers to improve their vehicle's safety. Why spend time and money to exceed a 5 star safety rating if you're not allowed to tell anyone about it?
Why spend time and money to exceed a 5 star safety rating if you're not allowed to tell anyone about it?
This just reads like the typical “if there’s two sides shouting equally loudly, I must be right because I’m in the middle” nonsense. It’s nothing more than the balance fallacy. Just because there are factual elements to both arguments doesn’t mean they have equal weight. In this case, unless Tesla demonstrates that NHTSA doesn’t understand its own tests, data or rules (and they have given no indication that they are remotely capable of doing so), an objective observer would have little reason not to give greater weight to NHTSA’s side.This is a case where both sides are right.
(and where I'll be downvoted by readers who do fall on a particular side)
It is a fact that the Tesla Model 3 is significantly safer than other cars of similar size and weight. IMO, Tesla is fully within its rights to highlight that fact using publicly available NHTSA data.
Only allowing Tesla to advertise "5 stars", when it's vehicles are actually far safer than competing "5 star" rated vehicles, largely defeats the point of the NHTSA tests - to encourage auto makers to improve their vehicle's safety. Why spend time and money to exceed a 5 star safety rating if you're not allowed to tell anyone about it?
Except that is again not what they said. Tesla did not claim they are safer than any other car in its weight class. They said that it is safer than any other car period. That just doesn't hold up.
Yeah it's so much better in a partisan situation to use the well-established tropes of religious mockery. Because that makes you look soooo much better informed. Thanks for taking the intellectual level of the discussion down a notch. And with the second comment too.This is something that has been raised a lot in discussions, when The Faithful inevitably parrot The Leader. Its good to see it finally being addressed at a higher level, although I don’t look forward to the dumpster fire this comment section will inevitably become.
I see we have the torch tossed in the dumpster. Well done.Yeah it's so much better in a partisan situation to use the well-established tropes of religious mockery. Because that makes you look soooo much better informed. Thanks for taking the intellectual level of the discussion down a notch. And with the second comment too.This is something that has been raised a lot in discussions, when The Faithful inevitably parrot The Leader. Its good to see it finally being addressed at a higher level, although I don’t look forward to the dumpster fire this comment section will inevitably become.
I'm doubtful it would have been OK. If the highest rating is 5 stars and if there is more than one 5 star rated vehicle, then they can't claim their car is 'safer'. By the criteria used in the rating they can only claim their vehicle is 'as safe' as the others.The clear issue here is that Musk is attempting to use an official source as a citation while arguing that the official source is wrong.
He could have said, according to an independent analysis of NHTSA data, the Model 3 is the safest car in its class, and probably been okay.
Instead, he wanted to use the reputation of the NHTSA as a reliable agency, so he said it was according to the NHTSA, and then, he compared to all cars, not just cars in the same class.
When the agency told him he was using the data in an unsupported manner, he said they were wrong.
If they are wrong, why refer to their numbers at all? Are they right on everything else, and just wrong on how to read their own tests? That would be odd, would you agree?
Musk is just showing he is really not fit to be in the position he has.
I'm doubtful it would have been OK. If the highest rating is 5 stars and if there is more than one 5 star rated vehicle, then they can't claim their car is 'safer'. By the criteria used in the rating they can only claim their vehicle is 'as safe' as the others.The clear issue here is that Musk is attempting to use an official source as a citation while arguing that the official source is wrong.
He could have said, according to an independent analysis of NHTSA data, the Model 3 is the safest car in its class, and probably been okay.
Instead, he wanted to use the reputation of the NHTSA as a reliable agency, so he said it was according to the NHTSA, and then, he compared to all cars, not just cars in the same class.
When the agency told him he was using the data in an unsupported manner, he said they were wrong.
If they are wrong, why refer to their numbers at all? Are they right on everything else, and just wrong on how to read their own tests? That would be odd, would you agree?
Musk is just showing he is really not fit to be in the position he has.
Model 3 achieves the lowest probability of injury of any vehicle ever tested by NHTSA
At what point should a "Doesn't contribute" downvote be changed to a spam notification? Or maybe the "Sponsored comment" note is missing from that post due to a bug?[Offtopic blah]
At what point should a "Doesn't contribute" downvote be changed to a spam notification? Or maybe the "Sponsored comment" note is missing from that post due to a bug?[Offtopic blah]
Probably, we'll see. Lawyers will stand ground if they think they are in the right & its too early to tell where this goes
If audi/vw, porsche etc start using the same metrics then it puts the NHSTA in a bit of a bind, if there was no legalese prevent such use in the first place.
Model 3 owners will be ok regardless, myself included. This car has already saved my life twice with auto braking & the sensors, so no complaints in that dept
I did get an email offer from Tesla to upgrade from EAP to FSD for $3,000 which I passed as I don't drive very long distances & I do enjoy driving the model 3 for short distances.
Any auto manufacturer in the history of the world playing fast and loose with the things it claims in its marketing? Shocked /s
FTFY
The NHTSA would have liked Tesla to stop there. Instead, Tesla dug into the NHTSA's data and spotted an opportunity to further toot its own horn. As part of its evaluation process, the NHTSA calculates a number called a vehicle safety score, which the agency has characterized as “relative risk of injury." The agency then awards each vehicle a star rating based on VSS ranges.
Tesla noticed that the Model 3 had a better VSS score than any other vehicle on the market. That, in Tesla's view, means that a Model 3 driver is less likely to be injured in a crash than a driver of any other vehicle.
It's truly strange until it's something you like and then it's not strange anymore, is it?
What exactly did NHTSA think would happen, if they butt heads with a team of nitpicky software/hardware engineers, hell bent on proving a point
NHTSA cannot hand wave this away, just because they are a gov't agency.
Either clean up their own ratings or face the result
If Tesla is correct on what they did in court, it will be egg on the agency's face
& they will have opened up the possibility of digging thru stuff like this for other car makers, who will also be "technically correct"
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Is there anything Tesla related you won't aggressively defend on Ars? Like Tesla is being dishonest here, there is no 'gotchya!' with government agencies. The cult of personality around Elon and luxury goods people buy is truly strange.
The gov has no leg to stand on, they have to prove there's a blatant lie taking place, otherwise it runs against the first amendment..
None of the FSD payments have been realized on teslas books, which means they cant use them or call it profit or whatever, close to $2bn from memory.
So you’re claiming that if you buy a Tesla car and get the FSD option, they set the money you paid for the option aside and don’t count it as income?
Interesting take...
They don’t count it as income, but it’s cash; it’s not in escrow or anything, they can spend the cash. In effect it’s a zero-interest loan.ThanksNone of the FSD payments have been realized on teslas books, which means they cant use them or call it profit or whatever, close to $2bn from memory.
So you’re claiming that if you buy a Tesla car and get the FSD option, they set the money you paid for the option aside and don’t count it as income?
Interesting take...
That's the way accounting rules work.
Ha... my worry about being in a Tesla has less to do with crashing and more to do with a nasty electrical fire.
But I realize that's just a result of media reporting, quite frankly I'm well aware a short in the car stereo is just as dramatic in a regular ICE.
At what point should a "Doesn't contribute" downvote be changed to a spam notification? Or maybe the "Sponsored comment" note is missing from that post due to a bug?[Offtopic blah]
You, Sir are free to ignore opinions that do not match your worldview.
Technically right or technically wrong we can even argue punctuation, get English university professors lawyers and judges to tell us what the words mean or don't mean and its all technically pointless.
Go to a shopping mall in suburban America let 1000 people read the claims made and ask them what they think it means and would they buy the car based on said claims, and there is the true meaning of the words.
STATUTORY INTERPRETATION: THE MEANING OF MEANING
http://www5.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ ... 011/3.html
It's as if the libertarians all bought Teslas.
This sort of thinking led to the oft-mocked 100-point video game review scores and the like.of yesteryear. As if the subjective reviewer could really draw a meaningful distinction between, say, a 93-point score and a 92-point score.Tesla noticed that the Model 3 had a better VSS score than any other vehicle on the market. That, in Tesla's view, means that a Model 3 driver is less likely to be injured in a crash than a driver of any other vehicle.
So would I. If NHTSA thinks the VSS isn't sufficient for such comparisons then the solution isn't to hammer Tesla's use. NHTSA needs to fix VSS then publish the scores.
The position of the NHTSA, which knows a lot more than you or me about crashworthiness and auto safety, is that crash dynamics are so complex that there is no utility in offering more than a five-level (six? I don't know if there's a zero-star rating) scoring system. More verbose information is not necessarily better, especially when attempting to communicate to non-experts.
"People are too stupid to understand more data" is a pretty poor excuse for not having a more informative safety scoring system than 1-5.
I used to like Tesla as a company and be excited by their products. Now between the marketing lies, the total disregard for human life in promoting their cruise control as "auto-pilot," the mistreatment of female employees, the manipulation of their stock value through illegal statements by their CEO, the necessity to agree that they can track your car at all times for usage data and product development, it just seems like a sleazey company that I don't trust. Is this what Musk is going for?
At what point should a "Doesn't contribute" downvote be changed to a spam notification? Or maybe the "Sponsored comment" note is missing from that post due to a bug?[Offtopic blah]
You, Sir are free to ignore opinions that do not match your worldview.
That is either satire at its finest, or you have a clinically significant lack of insight. Either way, you are a drag. When you’re not defending the indefensible, you’re accusing Ars authors of racism/misogyny on the flimsiest premises.
Spam is a bad term for this, trolling is not.
If Tesla has said "lowest probability of injury in the NHTSA tests of any vehicle ever tested by NHTSA" then I think they'd be on pretty firm ground. The NHTSA probably still wouldn't like it because it's not how they want their data to be used, but it seems like a pretty factually solid claim.
ThanksNone of the FSD payments have been realized on teslas books, which means they cant use them or call it profit or whatever, close to $2bn from memory.
So you’re claiming that if you buy a Tesla car and get the FSD option, they set the money you paid for the option aside and don’t count it as income?
Interesting take...
That's the way accounting rules work.
It's an "advance payment" so it's held on the balance sheet as an asset until the income can be realized:
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/a/ad ... ayment.asp
Edit: Add link and better description.
The gov has no leg to stand on, they have to prove there's a blatant lie taking place, otherwise it runs against the first amendment.
https://cleantechnica.com/2019/08/07/br ... next-week/
The real problems are the tests and the reporting are designed to let everyone have something good to say about their cars so they can sell them. Tesla wants to disrupt the apple cart and show that it has cars that are safer than anything ever sold.
Maybe the IIHS test will help here. Tesla's EVs - and any similar EV implementations - are by design, that skateboard has many advantages in terms of rigit structure, large crumple zones, and low center of gravity, that are not applicable to ICE car designs, it's not really a surprise.