NHTSA closes second Tesla investigation in a week


The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has closed its second investigation on Tesla vehicles in a week after it ended an Autopilot probe last week.

This week, the NHTSA said it was closing an investigation it opened in November 2020 that aimed to find the cause of a touchscreen failure that resulted in the loss of a rear camera image display when the car was in reverse.

The agency closed the investigation on May 2. It probed the issue in 158,716 Tesla vehicles.

The NHTSA described the initial issue in its document from 2020:

“Failure of the touchscreen results in loss of rear camera image display when reverse gear is selected, resulting in reduced rear visibility when backing. Failure of touchscreen also impacts HVAC (defogging) ability, and audible chimes relating to ADAS, Autopilot and turn signals.”

The NHTSA filed a petition to close the investigation on May 2, stating that its Office of Defects Investigation learned the memory chip Tesla was using in its vehicles had a life usage rating of approximately 3,000 Program-Erase cycles, and then would be no longer operational.

This would take only five to six years to fully consume. Once the memory was gone, the operation would no longer occur.

Tesla filed a recall in January 2021 and provided free hardware in addition to an Over-the-Air update. This remedied the issue.

The NHTSA said Tesla’s hardware update and OTA update “appears to address the unreasonable risk to motor safety presented by the premature failure of the component,” which was enough to close the investigation.

This is the second NHTSA investigation into Tesla vehicles that has been closed in two weeks.

On April 26, an investigation into Tesla Autopilot was closed after the automaker rolled out a recall in December to “increase the prominence of visual alerts on the user interface, simplify engagement and disengagement of Autosteer, make additional checks upon engaging Autosteer while using the feature outside of controlled access highways and when approaching traffic controls,” among other things.

The NHTSA opened a Recall Query into this OTA update to ensure it was providing additional safeguards while Autopilot was being used.

I’d love to hear from you! If you have any comments, concerns, or questions, please email me at joey@teslarati.com. You can also reach me on Twitter @KlenderJoey, or if you have news tips, you can email us at tips@teslarati.com.

NHTSA closes investigation into Tesla rearview camera loss





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Tesla brings color from ‘world’s most advanced paint shop’ to U.S. Model Y


Tesla has brought a color from the “world’s most advanced paint shop” at Gigafactory Berlin to the United States on the Model Y.

Four years ago, Tesla CEO Elon Musk declared its paint shop at Gigafactory Berlin in Germany to be “the world’s most advanced” because it could apply “more layers of stunning colors that subtly change with curvature.”

Two colors it launched were Quicksilver and Midnight Cherry Red, both only available at the paint shop in Germany. The U.S. was not able to receive these colors as the paint shops at Fremont and Giga Texas were not capable of creating these colors.

Tesla Giga Berlin is getting a world-class paint shop, new color ‘layers’ to come

Musk did say the paint shops at these factories would eventually be upgraded to apply those colors.

Now, Tesla is offering one of the colors, Quicksilver, in the United States on the Model Y from the Design Studio:

Last week, Tesla launched the color in the U.S. with inventory Model Y units; it was not available to purchase on custom orders in the Online Design Studio.

Tesla is offering the color for $2,000 on top of the purchase price of the vehicle. As a result, Tesla has also decreased the price of the Solid Black color to $1,500, previously priced at $2,000.

It is only available on the All-Wheel-Drive configurations of the Model Y, which include the Long Range and Performance trims of the vehicle.

I’d love to hear from you! If you have any comments, concerns, or questions, please email me at joey@teslarati.com. You can also reach me on Twitter @KlenderJoey, or if you have news tips, you can email us at tips@teslarati.com.

Tesla brings color from ‘world’s most advanced paint shop’ to U.S. Model Y





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Tesla prepares to launch newest driver assistance setting — and it’s not related to FSD


Tesla is preparing to launch its newest driver assistance setting — and it’s not related to the company’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) suite.

Tesla is constantly improving its vehicles through software updates. Nearly every download brings new features that enable more accessibility or a more pleasurable ownership experience for drivers, and they come at no additional cost.

The upcoming 2024.14.3 update is no different. Along with a bundle of other features, it appears Tesla is prepared to roll out a “Tesla Voice Assistant” in its vehicles, which will likely handle everything from changing the climate to switching to a specific song you have.

The new feature was spotted by Tesla hacker greentheonly in a recent X post, which shows the multitude of additions that are coming to vehicles within the company’s lineup:

According to the coding, Tesla’s Voice Assistant will be activated by a “wakeword,” which means it will always be listening. If you have Amazon Alexa, you know what this means. A simple “Hey Alexa” activates the device you’re speaking to, which then allows you to speak commands to it.

This differentiates from the current system by one key difference: Tesla’s current voice command feature requires the touch of a button on the steering wheel.

It also appears to already have a chosen tone or narration, as it will be the Jenny Neutral voice from Microsoft. This is an interesting Easter Egg with that specific voice being used.

Along with the new Tesla Voice Assistant, the automaker is planning to roll out several other features, which include Amazon Music playback support, new Track Mode windows, and more options available to the “Restricted Drivers” feature, which adds more safe gates than what is currently available.

Tesla also has two new wheel designs in the coding, called “Wishbone,” which will be available in 19″ and 20″ sizes.

I’d love to hear from you! If you have any comments, concerns, or questions, please email me at joey@teslarati.com. You can also reach me on Twitter @KlenderJoey, or if you have news tips, you can email us at tips@teslarati.com.

Tesla prepares to launch newest driver assistance setting — and it’s not related to FSD





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