NHTSA Investigates Tesla’s Driverless Vehicle-Summon Feature
Agency Also is Looking Into Company’s Partial Automation System
 
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Tesla Inc. is under federal scrutiny over concerns that a newly released driver-assistance feature could result in crashes, the latest move by auto safety regulators to investigate the electric-car maker’s technology.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has opened a preliminary evaluation of about 2.6 million Tesla vehicles after reports of issues with a feature known as “Actually Smart Summon.” The agency said in documents posted on its website that it received one complaint alleging that the system resulted in a crash and reviewed media reports of at least three other similar incidents.
Actually Smart Summon, which was rolled out late last year, allows owners to move their vehicles remotely in parking lots or other locations using a smartphone app. NHTSA said some vehicles crashed after they failed to detect posts or parked cars while operating using the feature. The agency also said some users had too little time to avoid a crash.
Tesla didn’t respond to a request for comment from Bloomberg.
Actually Smart Summon 🍑 enables your car to come to you from anywhere in the parking lot
You can also send it to a location of your choosing — Tesla (@Tesla)
The probe comes about three months after NHTSA opened an investigation into whether Tesla’s partial-automation system marketed as Full Self-Driving is defective. That came on top of a recall query NHTSA opened in April into whether Tesla had done enough to keep drivers from misusing another set of assistance features the company markets as Autopilot.
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