연방 당국은 청원이 제기되었음에도 불구하고 테슬라의 원페달 주행 기능을 리콜할 필요가 없다고 밝혔다
Ars Technica
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🔬 연구
#review
#리콜
#연방 당국
#원페달 주행
#전기차
#테슬라
원문 출처: Ars Technica · Genesis Park에서 요약 및 분석
요약
연방 교통안전국(NHTSA)은 테슬라 전기차의 주차 중 급발행 의혹과 관련하여 2013년식 이상 모델의 리콜을 요구한 청원을 기각했습니다. 기관은 원페달 주행 방식이 차량의 설계 결함으로 인한 급발행을 유발했다는 주장을 받아들이지 않았으며, 이러한 사고가 차량의 공학적 문제라기보다 운전자의 조작 실수일 가능성이 크다는 점을 시사했습니다.
본문
One-pedal driving is not causing Tesla electric vehicles to suddenly accelerate when parked, according to federal regulators. For almost as long as Tesla has been selling cars, it has been hit with sporadic accusations of parked cars accelerating when they shouldn’t. Known to the industry as “sudden unintended acceleration,” the question for regulators is whether the problem is a human one or an engineering one, and over the years, engineers who think they’ve found the culprit have petitioned the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to force a recall. These efforts usually fail, as was the case today, when NHTSA said it would not tell Tesla to recall every EV it built since 2013. Because electric motors are also generators, EVs use regenerative braking to recover energy when they slow down rather than wasting that kinetic energy as heat (and maybe a bit of sound) via the friction brakes. In many battery EVs and just about any hybrid I can think of, a brake-by-wire system blends the two together—the driver uses the left pedal as normal, and the car slows down. Some automakers (I’m looking at you, Porsche) think this is the only way a driver should slow their EV. But an electric motor can also be programmed to regeneratively brake when the driver lifts their foot from the throttle, and in Tesla’s EVs (as well as Rivian’s and Lucid’s), this is the only way to regen, as there is no brake-by-wire system, only traditional hydraulic friction brakes. Technically, I just described lift-off regen, but if the car has been programmed to come to a complete stop when you take your foot from the accelerator, that’s one-pedal driving. Some EV drivers absolutely love one-pedal driving; others don’t. I like one-pedal for low-speed driving or when I want something similar to engine braking. But according to the petition sent to NHTSA in 2023 by a Greek engineer, this causes a “short-circuit” in Tesla drivers’ brains. There is still a "Go" pedal and a "Stop" pedal, arranged just like the pedals on a traditional automatic transmission car. "Go" pedal modulates speed in normal driving situations. The farther you press it, the faster you go. If you let up on it, you'll start to slow down. It's basically similar to engine braking in a manual transmission...let up on the gas pedal in a manual transmission, and you'll start to slow down. Fully lifting your foot off the "Go" pedal in one-pedal mode will give you regenerative braking equivalent to about the normal rate you would slow down when approaching a stop sign. It's a definite, deliberate braking, but not an "oh shit" emergency braking. Partially lifting off the "Go" pedal will slow you down more gradually. Fully lifting off the "Go" will eventually bring you to a complete stop (at which point the friction brake automatically kicks in for "holding", since there is no regeneration without motion). In one-pedal driving mode, the car doesn't "creep" the way an ICE with an automatic transmission does. The default action of the car in the absence of any command from the driver is to slow down at a normal "approaching a stop sign" deceleration rate until it comes to a stop, and then just not move. You quite quickly get a good intuitive sense for how much distance it will take you to stop from whatever speed you're going, and when to start letting up on the "go" pedal, so most of the time (as long as you're not tailgating people) you never need to touch the "stop" pedal, you just let up on the "go" pedal to slow down and/or stop as needed. If the driver ahead of you stops suddenly, or a deer or child runs across the road, or if a traffic light turns yellow a bit too far away to go through, but closer than where you would normally start slowing down, you do the same thing you would do in any other car: you hit the "stop" pedal and stop as quickly as necessary/possible. The "stop" pedal in a Tesla is just a standard friction brake, just like in an ICE vehicle. It doesn't do any fancy blended regeneration like some other EVs and hybrids do. These sort of "stop quickly" events are not very common if you're keeping safe following distances, but they're not so rare that you lose the appropriate muscle memory for "oh shit, slam on the brakes". Fairly often I can get through my entire 26 mile (each way) commute without using the "stop" pedal (other than holding it down to put the car in gear at the start), but I don't think I've ever managed to go through a full week of commutes without ever using the "stop" pedal.
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