Brian Malone
Industrial
- Jun 15, 2018
- 431
This story says a lawsuit has been filed against Tesla on behalf of the family of a man who crashed his CT and was unable to open the electrically operated doors after the electrical system became damaged by the crash, and he perished in the vehicle fire created by the battery in a thermal runaway condition.
www.independent.co.uk
I am not familiar with the Tesla door releases - I have ridden in Model 3 and a Y with Uber rides but did not pay attention to the door mechanisms. My cars are 2005, 2009, and 2021 models by Toyota, Nissan, and Buick and they all have a mechanical linkage to actuate their door releases ( electrical locks /remotes move the mechanical linkages).
Those of you familiar with the Tesla doors - is the setup a design flaw for emergency exit? Does this lawsuit have merit for a major safety issue or is this a heart-broken family reacting to a tragic loss. Have other auto manufacturers gone to purely electrically actuated door releases?

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I am not familiar with the Tesla door releases - I have ridden in Model 3 and a Y with Uber rides but did not pay attention to the door mechanisms. My cars are 2005, 2009, and 2021 models by Toyota, Nissan, and Buick and they all have a mechanical linkage to actuate their door releases ( electrical locks /remotes move the mechanical linkages).
Those of you familiar with the Tesla doors - is the setup a design flaw for emergency exit? Does this lawsuit have merit for a major safety issue or is this a heart-broken family reacting to a tragic loss. Have other auto manufacturers gone to purely electrically actuated door releases?