Tesla's Musk says new
Autopilot likely would have prevented death
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[September 12, 2016]
By Alexandria Sage and David Shepardson
SAN FRANCISCO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -
Tesla Motors Co Chief Executive Elon Musk said on Sunday the
automaker was updating its semi-autonomous driving system Autopilot
with new limits on hands-off driving and other improvements that
likely would have prevented a fatality in May.
Musk said the update, which will be available within a week or two
through an "over-the-air" software update, would rely foremost on
radar to give Tesla's electric luxury cars a better sense of what is
around them and when to brake.
New restrictions of Autopilot 8.0 are a nod to widespread concerns
that the system lulled users into a false sense of security through
its "hands-off" driving capability. The updated system now will
temporarily prevent drivers from using the system if they do not
respond to audible warnings to take back control of the car.
"We're making much more effective use of radar," Musk told
journalists on a phone call. "It will be a dramatic improvement in
the safety of the system done entirely through software."
Tesla's Autopilot, introduced in October, has been the focus of
intense scrutiny since it was revealed in July that a Tesla Model S
driver, Joshua Brown, was killed while using the technology in a May
7 collision with a truck in Florida.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has been
investigating Tesla's Autopilot system since June because of the
fatal accident. The agency had been briefed on the changes by Tesla
and would review them, spokesman Bryan Thomas said. He declined to
offer an update on the Tesla investigation.
Musk said it was "very likely" the improved Autopilot would have
prevented the death of Brown, whose car sped into the trailer of a
truck crossing a highway, but he cautioned that the update "doesn't
mean perfect safety."
"PROBABILITY OF SAFETY"
"Perfect safety is really an impossible goal," Musk said. "It's
about improving the probability of safety. There won't ever be zero
fatalities, there won't ever be zero injuries."
One of the main challenges of using cameras and radars for a braking
system is how to prevent so-called false positives, in which a car
might think an overhead highway sign, for example, was an obstacle
to be avoided.
Using radar and fleet learning, rather than relying primarily on
cameras, would solve that problem, Musk said.
"Anything metallic or dense, the radar system we're confident will
be able to detect that and initiate a braking event," he said.
Silicon Valley-based Tesla is known for its innovation in luxury
electric vehicles but some critics, including rival carmakers, have
said it was hasty in rolling out Autopilot. Tesla stood by Autopilot
after the fatality.
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A man looks around Tesla Motors' Model S P85 at its showroom in
Beijing January 29, 2014. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
The revised system will sound warnings if drivers take their hands off the wheel
for more than a minute at speeds above 45 miles per hour (72 kph) when there is
no vehicle ahead, Musk said.
The warning will sound after the driver’s hands are off the wheel for more than
three minutes when the Tesla is following another car at speeds above 45 mph.
The dashboard also will flash a pulsing light.
If the driver ignores three audible warnings in an hour, the system will
temporarily shut off until it is parked, Musk said.
Advanced Autopilot users, rather than new users, were most likely to ignore
warnings to put their hands back on the wheel, Musk said.
Besides the fallout from the fatality, Musk has had to prepare for the Model 3
mass-market vehicle due late next year and completion of its Nevada battery
factory, while trying to sell skeptical investors on the merits of a proposed
acquisition of SolarCity.
On Sept. 1, SpaceX, where Musk serves as CEO, sustained what he later called
"the most difficult and complex failure" in the commercial space company's
history when a Falcon 9 rocket exploded on its launch pad in Cape Canaveral,
Florida.
"One of the worst weeks ever, really," he told reporters.
Musk said he had wanted to improve Autopilot's capabilities last year but was
told it was impossible to do so without incurring more "false positives," such
as a car braking suddenly for a harmless tin can.
In July tweeted publicly that he was encouraged by talks with supplier Bosch
about improvements to radar.
"I wish we could have done it earlier," he said on Sunday. "The perfect is the
enemy of the good."
(Writing By Alexandria Sage; Editing by Bill Trott)
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