Tesla Model X Speed Increased to 114 kmph before Accident – U.S. NTSB
Tesla Model X Speed Increased to 114 kmph before Accident – U.S. NTSB
The report said the driver in the March incident got warnings to put his hands back on the wheel more than 15 minutes before the crash.

The driver of a Tesla Inc Model X car using Autopilot did not have his hands on the steering wheel in the six seconds before a fatal crash in California in March, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board said. The NTSB said in a preliminary report the 38-year-old driver, who died in the hospital shortly after the crash, had been given two visual alerts and one auditory alert to place his hands on the steering wheel during the trip.

The report also said the vehicle had sped up from 62 miles (99 km) per hour to nearly 71 miles (114 km) per hour in the three seconds before the March 23 crash - and above the 65 mph (105 km per hour) speed limit. Five days later, the electric car’s high-voltage battery reignited and the fire department had to extinguish the blaze.

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Tesla declined to comment on the NTSB report, but said in March that the driver had not braked or taken actions to avoid the crash in the final seconds before the accident. The safety board is investigating four Tesla crashes since last year and looking at post-crash fire issues and the use of Autopilot.

The report said the driver in the March incident got warnings to put his hands back on the wheel more than 15 minutes before the crash. In the minute before the accident, his hands were on the wheel for a total 34 seconds, but not in the last six seconds before he struck a crash attenuator and concrete barrier on U.S. Highway 101 in Mountain View, California, the report said.

Last month, police in Utah said a Tesla in Autopilot mode crashed into a parked fire truck. In that incident, the driver of the Model S did not touch the steering wheel in the 80 seconds before the crash.

In April, the NTSB removed Tesla as a party to its investigation of Huang's crash after the automaker made public statements. Tesla responded by asserting the NTSB is "more concerned with press headlines than actually promoting safety."

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