Technology
Tesla Model 3 car explodes after hitting truck
San Francisco, Aug 12
A Tesla Model 3 car has crashed once more, this time it collided with a tow truck in Moscow exploding into flames and severely injuring three of a family, the media reported.
Russian businessman Alexey Tretyakov, along with his two children were present in the car, who were all severely injured, the Electrek reported on Sunday.
Video footages of the car catching fire and exploding have been circulating on social networking platforms like Instagram. The vehicle was reportedly on Autopilot at the time of the accident.
As of now, there has been no official acknowledgement or explanation to the unfortunate accident from Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
However, this is not the first time that Tesla vehicles on Autopilot have crashed into other vehicles and exploded into flames.
Back in 2016, in a fatal accident, a Tesla vehicle on Autopilot crashed into a streetsweeper truck in China.
Until now, the automaker have insisted that it is safer to drive on Autopilot and that its vehicles were much less likely to catch fire than gas-powered vehicles, the report said.
In its latest safety report, Tesla claimed that there was a Tesla vehicle fire for every 170 million miles travelled between 2012 and 2018 compared to a vehicle fire for every 19 million miles travelled in the US.
Russian businessman Alexey Tretyakov, along with his two children were present in the car, who were all severely injured, the Electrek reported on Sunday.
Video footages of the car catching fire and exploding have been circulating on social networking platforms like Instagram. The vehicle was reportedly on Autopilot at the time of the accident.
As of now, there has been no official acknowledgement or explanation to the unfortunate accident from Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
However, this is not the first time that Tesla vehicles on Autopilot have crashed into other vehicles and exploded into flames.
Back in 2016, in a fatal accident, a Tesla vehicle on Autopilot crashed into a streetsweeper truck in China.
Until now, the automaker have insisted that it is safer to drive on Autopilot and that its vehicles were much less likely to catch fire than gas-powered vehicles, the report said.
In its latest safety report, Tesla claimed that there was a Tesla vehicle fire for every 170 million miles travelled between 2012 and 2018 compared to a vehicle fire for every 19 million miles travelled in the US.
18 hours ago
Rahul, Priyanka target NDA over Pappu Yadav’s arrest, allege systemic collusion in NEET aspirant death case
18 hours ago
Twinkle Khanna indulges in a gluttony contest with hubby Akshay Kumar
18 hours ago
Sanya Malhotra promises to represent women more honestly as 'Mrs' clocks 1 year
18 hours ago
Amitabh Bachchan calls India ‘first world’ after U-19 Men’s WC triumph
18 hours ago
Priyanka Chopra celebrates brother Siddharth, Neelam Upadhyaya’s first wedding anniversary
18 hours ago
Huma Qureshi has an ‘evening full of love’ with her ‘forever icon’ Rekha
18 hours ago
Kareena Kapoor shares ‘LOC Kargil’ scene with Saif Ali Khan, says ‘Little did we know’
18 hours ago
Rajinikanth, Kamal Haasan film's promo shoot to begin from Saturday
18 hours ago
Margot Robbie’s skin influenced ‘Wuthering Heights’ set design
18 hours ago
Sara Arjun: ‘Euphoria’ found me at a time when nothing felt certain
18 hours ago
‘Ghooskhor Pandat’ row: FWICE writes to OTT platforms, asks producer to withdraw the title of Manoj Bajpayee-starrer film
18 hours ago
US senators call for a probe into Elon Musk-led SpaceX for potential Chinese links
18 hours ago
Indian markets rebound this week over India-US trade deal, RBI MPC decisions
