Yes it’s a horrible thing to have happened, and I’m sorry for the loss of life, but from reading the article it’s not clear how the vehicle being a cyber truck was a contributing factor. One person was rescued. To me it seems the real problem was the 19 year old driver that was drunk.
A preliminary investigation revealed police were unable to extinguish the flames of a Tesla Cybertruck after a crash in Piedmont in November, trapping three and resulting in their deaths
I appreciate the information, It just wasn’t in the article at all. The part you quoted didn’t explain anything. Only stated the make and model. It’s not clear why from the article.
You’re getting downvotes by the anti-Tesla hate. But you are correct.
It being a Cybertruck didn’t really have anything to do with it. One person was saved, so clearly they were able to get into the vehicle and to the passengers.
Car fires happen all the time, people die in ICE car fires every day. There are an average of 33 car fires every hour in the US. But only the Tesla fires make headlines all the time.
It wasn’t a random passerby it was a motorist behind the tesla who saw the crash happen and immediately rendered aid - as the article explains.
Even they could only get 1 person out, so clearly the other three were trapped. No doubt by the intensity of temperature preventing further aid, if not because the electrics then failed trapping the other three.
My point was it was a random civilian that helped, not a trained first responder, like I already pointed out.
Or the other three were already dead from the crash itself. We don’t know from the article, because yet again, the article doesn’t actually mention anything new. There is no new information here that wasn’t already obvious in November when this happened.
The Alameda County Coroner’s Bureau said driver Soren Dixon, 19, and passengers Jack Nelson, 20, and Krysta Tsukahara, 19, suffocated from smoke inhalation. Burns contributed to the deaths, the bureau said.
Teslas are the only vehicle that require the occupants to open hidden compartments to access emergency door latches during a fire. So long as that “feature” exists, it should be presumed the cause of every occupant death in a fire until conclusively proven otherwise.
Ah yes, I forgot that door handles are the exact same design in every vehicle from a manufacturer regardless of interior differences. Always the same handle no matter how badly it fits.
I’ve never had trouble opening a door. You have a Tesla though so you’re probably used to having to explain to people how to do otherwise trivial things in your “car of the future”. Like how to open the glove box, enter and exit the vehicle, etc.
No, 90% of people have no problem. The few that don’t see the button on the door handle, usually go straight for the emergency handle. A very small percentage aren’t the type to grab things randomly and just ask if they’re not sure.
Everyone focuses on the dumbest takes and experiences, not the real world average. Actually owning a Tesla for the last 6 years and experiencing all of this personally, including long distance trips, and even supercharging on CA on those trips, made me realize just how most online posts about them aren’t accurate.
And how defensive some people get when their opinion based solely on reading shit online is challenged by someone with actual experience.
Everyone focuses on the dumbest takes and experiences, not the real world average.
It’s completely legitimate criticism that Tesla makes ordinary things difficult for no benefit. In some Tesla’s it can be damaging to the car to pull the “emergency handle.” That’s just legitimately stupid.
I get that “most of the time” everything is fine. But the fact that it’s not “all of the time” is just… Why?
I’d like to jump in here and point out there is an easy solution to this…
Make a 2 stage handle. 1st stage opens the door with the electronics, pull the handle further to engage the manual override. This is what Ford does in the Mach-E.
So yeah, it’s a shitty design to have the emergency door handle as a separate hidden feature.
Oh yes, I forgot that the exact shape and position of this handle is the exact same on those vehicles as well. None of them are the exact same, that’s the entire point of the complaints.
Yes it’s a horrible thing to have happened, and I’m sorry for the loss of life, but from reading the article it’s not clear how the vehicle being a cyber truck was a contributing factor. One person was rescued. To me it seems the real problem was the 19 year old driver that was drunk.
Edit: I hate Elon Musk too guys, calm down.
The accident was the drunken driver.
The fact that they couldn’t get to the trapped victims was the Cybertruck.
I’m not sure which part of this is confusing.
It’s explained right under the headline.
Please see this article for more information: https://medium.com/@davidsehyeonbaek/why-tesla-evs-catch-fire-and-why-victims-struggle-to-escape-8ec89e59760c
I appreciate the information, It just wasn’t in the article at all. The part you quoted didn’t explain anything. Only stated the make and model. It’s not clear why from the article.
You’re getting downvotes by the anti-Tesla hate. But you are correct.
It being a Cybertruck didn’t really have anything to do with it. One person was saved, so clearly they were able to get into the vehicle and to the passengers.
Car fires happen all the time, people die in ICE car fires every day. There are an average of 33 car fires every hour in the US. But only the Tesla fires make headlines all the time.
They are not. Teslas are well known for trapping and killing their riders.
Except at least one occupant was able to be saved from the vehicle… By a random nearby person, not even emergency personnel.
So clearly they were not trapped here, like you want to claim.
It wasn’t a random passerby it was a motorist behind the tesla who saw the crash happen and immediately rendered aid - as the article explains.
Even they could only get 1 person out, so clearly the other three were trapped. No doubt by the intensity of temperature preventing further aid, if not because the electrics then failed trapping the other three.
Don’t waste your breath on the Apartheid Manchild servicers. Especially the ones who can’t read.
🙄
My point was it was a random civilian that helped, not a trained first responder, like I already pointed out.
Or the other three were already dead from the crash itself. We don’t know from the article, because yet again, the article doesn’t actually mention anything new. There is no new information here that wasn’t already obvious in November when this happened.
Teslas are the only vehicle that require the occupants to open hidden compartments to access emergency door latches during a fire. So long as that “feature” exists, it should be presumed the cause of every occupant death in a fire until conclusively proven otherwise.
They aren’t the only one, but you never see article about it on for other vehicles, and no one bothers to actually do any research anymore.
And not all models are the same. In my 2018 model 3 regularly has new riders open the emergency handle by sheer guess instead of the actual button.
But don’t let reality get in the way of posting your assumptions as if they’re facts.
They are the only one. It is a travesty that they haven’t been subject to a government recall.
Gotcha. Incompetent with both ergonomics and emergency egress.
They can’t even fucking standardize on an emergency feature?
Ah yes, I forgot that door handles are the exact same design in every vehicle from a manufacturer regardless of interior differences. Always the same handle no matter how badly it fits.
I’ve never had trouble opening a door. You have a Tesla though so you’re probably used to having to explain to people how to do otherwise trivial things in your “car of the future”. Like how to open the glove box, enter and exit the vehicle, etc.
No, 90% of people have no problem. The few that don’t see the button on the door handle, usually go straight for the emergency handle. A very small percentage aren’t the type to grab things randomly and just ask if they’re not sure.
Everyone focuses on the dumbest takes and experiences, not the real world average. Actually owning a Tesla for the last 6 years and experiencing all of this personally, including long distance trips, and even supercharging on CA on those trips, made me realize just how most online posts about them aren’t accurate.
And how defensive some people get when their opinion based solely on reading shit online is challenged by someone with actual experience.
100% don’t have trouble with my Toyota.
It’s completely legitimate criticism that Tesla makes ordinary things difficult for no benefit. In some Tesla’s it can be damaging to the car to pull the “emergency handle.” That’s just legitimately stupid.
I get that “most of the time” everything is fine. But the fact that it’s not “all of the time” is just… Why?
Did you forget that every car has the exact same mechanism? Pull handle, door opens? On 90%+ of cars?
I’d like to jump in here and point out there is an easy solution to this…
Make a 2 stage handle. 1st stage opens the door with the electronics, pull the handle further to engage the manual override. This is what Ford does in the Mach-E.
So yeah, it’s a shitty design to have the emergency door handle as a separate hidden feature.
Oh yes, I forgot that the exact shape and position of this handle is the exact same on those vehicles as well. None of them are the exact same, that’s the entire point of the complaints.