By John Wayne on Tuesday, 13 December 2022
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

Tesla Car Like Computer in “2001” Film By James Reed

Well, let’s get today’s blog attacking the technocracy off to a raving start. How about this story of a man whose new Tesla decided to shut down, trapping him inside? And don’t these cars sometimes catch fire? Then the possibility exists of beginning trapped inside a burning car, and these fires are difficult to put out. There is said to be an emergency override, but, what if it did not work? I would be carrying a hammer with me. Oh, but that’s illegal isn’t it?

https://www.businessinsider.com/tesla-orders-owner-pull-over-shutting-down-despite-full-charge-2022-12?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

“A Tesla owner said his 5-day-old car suddenly shut down, leaving him trapped inside. 

The YouTuber Tom Exton said he was 15 minutes into his ride before the car ordered him to pull over.

He said the driver's window "somehow broke" when he used the emergency override to get out the car.

A Tesla owner said his car ordered him to pull over before it suddenly shut down and trapped him inside.

Tom Exton, a British YouTuber who collects cars, was driving to London Thursday night when his 5-day-old Model Y asked him to pull over because it was "shutting down," he said.

He did so, and within minutes, "all power to the car was gone," Exton told Insider, adding that he felt trapped, as doors on Teslas need power to open and close.

"I couldn't open the door by conventional means," he said, "so I had to use the emergency manual-override latch on the door."

Exton said he'd been driving only for 15 minutes and the car was showing an almost full charge.  

According to Tesla's emergency-response guide for the Model Y, opening the front doors without power involves lifting the "mechanical release handle located near the window switches."

Exton followed these instructions, which "somehow broke the driver's window," he said.

The YouTuber expressed his frustration in a tweet and said he had to wait more than two hours for roadside assistance to arrive. It took about six hours to have the vehicle retrieved, he added.”

 

 

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