Tesla on Autopilot was speeding before fatal crash: probe

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WASHINGTON: The Tesla electric   car driving in semi-autonomous mode when it crashed and killed its driver was speeding just ahead of impact with a tractor-trailer, a preliminary probe showed Tuesday.

The National Transportation Safety Board said its preliminary findings  showed the Tesla was traveling at 74 miles (119 kilometers) per hour ahead of  impact, but noted that investigators have not yet completed an analysis of the  crash data or assigned a cause for the fatal collision. The car was driving in excess of the posted speed limit of 65 miles per  hour before the crash.

“All aspects of the crash remain under investigation,” the NTSB said in a  statement on its review of the May 7 fatality, which raised concerns about the  safety of the rapidly growing field of autonomous driving technology.

The NTSB said the driver was using the advanced driver assistance features  called Traffic-Aware Cruise Control and Autosteer lane keeping assistance.

It was also equipped with automatic emergency braking that is designed to  automatically apply the brakes to reduce the severity of or assist in avoiding  frontal collisions.

Tesla earlier this month acknowledged the crash and said its sensors failed  to pick up the white side of the truck against a brightly lit sky.

With the truck crossing the divided highway, the impact sheared off the top  of the car and killed the driver.

Some reports said the driver may have been watching a DVD at the time,  ignoring Tesla’s warning to remain vigilant while using the Autopilot system.

Tesla said the Autopilot system, introduced last year, is not a fully  autonomous system and that drivers are cautioned that they need to be at the  wheel and in control.

The system allows the vehicle to automatically change lanes, manage speed  and brake to avoid a collision. The system may be overridden by the driver.

Backers of autonomous driving say that despite the Tesla fatality, the  technology is likely to eliminate a large percentage of accidents, which are  attributed mainly to human error. Most major automakers are also looking at autonomous cars.

BMW has announced that it is joining forces with US computer chip giant  Intel and the Israeli technology firm Mobileye to develop self-driving cars,  aiming for fully automated driving in production cars by 2021.

South Korea’s Kia has pledged to produce a self-driving car by 2020 and  General Motors plans to test the technology with ridesharing giant Lyft.

Google has driven its autonomous cars some 1.5 million miles (2.4 million  kilometers) with only some minor dust-ups.