Another day,tamil new super sex videos another recall for Tesla, but it's also another one of those recalls which don't really require the customers to do anything besides update their car's software.
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), Tesla is recalling up to 199,575 Model S, Model X, and Model Y vehicles. In particular, these are 2023 models equipped with Tesla's Full Self Driving (FSD) 4.0 system, and running software versions 2023.44.30 through 2023.44.30.6 or 2023.44.100.
SEE ALSO: Elon Musk confirms: Tesla to build new, cheap model in 2025The culprit is a software instability that could prevent the rearview camera image from displaying, which can be quite an inconvenience. "If the condition is present, the rearview camera display will appear blank when the vehicle is shifted to Reverse," the NHTSA's Safety Recall Report says. "Unavailability of the rearview camera display upon starting a backing event may affect the driver’s rear visibility and increase the risk of a collision."
The NHTSA says, however, that Tesla has already released a free software update that fixes the issue. Affected customers will get a notification by mail starting March 22. Yes, that's two months from now. No, it doesn't make a lot of sense.
According to NHTSA's document, Tesla users started sending complaints about the issue in December 2023, and the company decided to do a recall on Jan. 12, 2023. Per the report, Tesla claims it is not aware of any crashes, injuries or deaths related to this particular bug.
Tesla recalls happen quite often; the last big one we remember was the company recalling more than 2 million cars in December over autopilot issues. Most of these, however, were due to software issues which Tesla was able to fix remotely, with an over-the-air software update.
Topics Tesla Cars
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
NYT Connections hints and answers for February 1: Tips to solve 'Connections' #601.
How to use your extra Amazon boxes to give back this holiday season
Twitter to start publicly flagging politicians' abusive tweets
Less than 1 percent of Huawei P30 Pro parts come from the U.S.
AI models don’t understand Gen Alpha slang
Rory McIlroy had a very blunt response to Tiger Woods' Christmas outfit
How to clear out your iCloud storage
8 weird things Indians did in 2016 to get into Guinness World Records
Wordle today: The answer and hints for February 13, 2025
Apple considered fitting a camera in the Apple Watch's wristband
Best free AI courses you can take online
'Super Mario Maker 2' review: One of the best games made even better
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。