Current:Home > NewsHow bad is Tesla's full self driving feature, actually? Third-party testing bodes ill -Zenith Investment School
How bad is Tesla's full self driving feature, actually? Third-party testing bodes ill
View
Date:2025-04-12 23:11:00
According to testing firm AMCI, Tesla’s FSD software can’t drive more than 13 miles without needing intervention.
We’re Just weeks out from Tesla’s big RoboTaxi presentation, where the automaker's self-driving shuttle will be revealed, and third-party independent research firm AMCI Testing has some bad news that could hang over the event like a cloud. AMCI just completed what it claims is “the most extensive real world test” of Tesla’s Full Self Driving (FSD) software, ostensibly the technology that would underpin the RoboTaxi's driverless tech, and the results are not confidence inspiring.
AMCI says its test covered over 1,000 miles of use and, in short, showed that the performance of Tesla’s FSD software is “suspect.” This isn’t the first time Tesla has caught criticism for FSD. For years, Tesla FSD software has been a source of controversy for the automaker. Tesla has dealt with everything from being called out by the California DMV for false advertising to being investigated by NHTSA.
There have been so many incidents involving Tesla’s Autopilot and FSD that we had to build a megathread to keep track of them all. It's worth noting that Tesla claims FSD is still in "beta," so it's incomplete, but it also sells the feature as a five-figure option on its current lineup of EVs, allowing owners to opt into being, essentially, real-world test dummies for the system. They must acknowledge that the system requires driver oversight and is not, as its name implies, a fully self-driving system today. Still, Tesla is essentially offloading the kind of testing other automakers conduct scientifically, with engineers and oversight, to customers in the real world. And AMCI’s findings on how reliable FSD is—or rather, is not—are just the latest road bump for Tesla and FSD.
AMCI says it conducted its tests in a Tesla Model 3 with FSD versions 12.5.1 and 12.5.3 across four different driving environments: city streets, rural two-lane highways, mountain roads, and freeways. AMCI was impressed with FSD’s ability to rely solely on cameras. (Tesla is the only automaker whose driver assistance systems of FSD's ambition operate using only cameras and, essentially, short-distance parking sensors, rather than a more complex—and expensive—combination of cameras, sensors, radar, and lidar, which can paint a much clearer picture with more redundancies than Tesla's camera array.) However, AMCI found that, on average, when operating FSD, human intervention is required at least once every 13 miles to maintain safe operation.
“With all hands-free augmented driving systems, and even more so with driverless autonomous vehicles, there is a compact of trust between the technology and the public. When this technology is offered the public is largely unaware of the caveats (such as monitor or supervise) and the tech considered empirically foolproof. Getting close to foolproof, yet falling short, creates an insidious and unsafe operator complacency issue as proven in the test results,” said David Stokols, CEO of AMCI Testing’s parent company, AMCI Global. “Although it positively impresses in some circumstances, you simply cannot reliably rely on the accuracy or reasoning behind its responses.”
You can see the full results of the test for yourself, but here is the gist from AMCI:
- More than 1,000 miles driven
- City streets, two-lane highways, mountain roads, and freeways
- Day and night operation; backlit to full-frontal sun
- 2024 Model 3 Performance with Hardware 4
- Full Self Driving (Supervised) Profile Setting: Assertive
- Surprisingly capable, while simultaneously problematic (and occasionally dangerously inept)
- The confidence (and often, competence) with which it undertakes complex driving tasks lulls users into believing that it is a thinking machine—with its decisions and performance based on a sophisticated assessment of risk (and the user’s wellbeing)
If you think 13-miles intervals between instances where a driver must grab the wheel or tap the brakes is pretty good, it's not just the number of interventions required, but the way those situations unfold. AMCI’s final point is the most eyebrow-raising (emphasis theirs): “When errors occur, they are occasionally sudden, dramatic, and dangerous; in those circumstances, it is unlikely that a driver without their hands on the wheel will be able to intervene in time to prevent an accident—or possibly a fatality.”
To back up its report, AMCI released three videos showing some of the instances in which FSD performed unsafely. Tesla has yet to publicly respond to this report, though we wouldn’t hold our breath for that. Again, the automaker can fall back on the idea that the software is still in development. Common sense, however, suggests that putting a feature with the FSD name and purported future self-driving capabilities into the hands of regular people now—when decisions the system makes or can flub—have dire consequences, and AMCI's testing proves that FSD's shortcomings rear their heads quite often.
veryGood! (236)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Lady Gaga's Hair Transformation Will Break Your Poker Face
- Utah Supreme Court to decide viability of a ballot question deemed ‘counterfactual’ by lower court
- Climate solution: In the swelter of hurricane blackouts, some churches stay cool on clean power
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Caitlin Clark, Indiana Fever eliminated by Sun in WNBA playoffs
- Opinion: UNLV's QB mess over NIL first of many to come until athletes are made employees
- Wendy's is offering $1 Frostys until the end of September
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- What to know about Jake Paul-Mike Tyson fight: date, odds, how to watch
Ranking
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- A Black student punished for his hairstyle wants to return to the Texas school he left
- Police in small Mississippi city discriminate against Black residents, Justice Department finds
- A Black student punished for his hairstyle wants to return to the Texas school he left
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Florida power outage map: Track outages as Hurricane Helene approaches from Gulf of Mexico
- Tommy Kramer, former Minnesota Vikings Pro Bowl QB, announces dementia diagnosis
- Jon and Kate Gosselin's Son Collin Gosselin's College Plans Revealed
Recommendation
Trump's 'stop
Judge directs NYC to develop plan for possible federal takeover of Rikers Island jail
Opinion: Pac-12 revival deserves nickname worthy of cheap sunglasses
Shohei Ohtani 50/50 home run ball headed to auction. How much will it be sold for?
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
The Daily Money: DOJ sues Visa
50 Cent's Netflix doc on Diddy allegations will give 'voice to the voiceless,' he says
What is Galaxy Gas? New 'whippets' trend with nitrous oxide products sparks concerns