It's always been intresting to see the average age for 'unintended acceleration'. In short, older people seem to own cars with 'the problem', v's young drivers. I suspect my time is coming.dan_b wrote: ↑Thu Feb 06, 2025 9:19 am "unintended acceleration" was quite a common cause of low speed parking accidents with early Teslas - was even a lawsuit attempted for supposed faulty accelerator pedals. But it was always user error.
There is now a setting in the Tesla software to enable "obstacle aware acceleration" - ie at low speeds it will use the parking assist to limit acceleration and even apply the brakes to stop people yeeting themselves into parked vehicles.
AE-NMidlands wrote: ↑Wed Feb 05, 2025 9:39 pm Maybe the "sport/rocket" setting or whatever it is called could be automatically disabled after a few moments manoeuvring?
That's a good function from Tesla. I'm reminded of a video one owner posted, different scenario, but also quite clever - they were waiting at a red light at a large US intersection. I think they were in the middle of 3 lanes, with a car to their left. The lights went green and they started to accelerate across the intersection, but the car was sluggish, they pressed the accelerator harder, but it remained very sluggish, then a car from the left shoots across their nose, having run the red light.