- Loud, Quiet, or Contextual? What European and African Consumer Behaviour Reveals About Status, History and Power
- Property Investment in Uncertain Times: How to Maximise Returns in a Shifting Economy - Eva August, CEO, Century 21
- Railway infrastructure is one of the solutions to Africa’s Trade Expansion - Caroline Trefault, MSC’s Intermodal Africa Manager
- The Precision Transition: Designing Africa’s power systems for reality, not abstraction
- Three weeks of conflict have tested the logic behind a rand-only portfolio - Harry Scherzer, CEO of Future Forex
Tesla Recalls 135,000 Cars After U.S. Finds Screens to Be Faulty
NEW YORK (Capital Markets in Africa) — Tesla Inc. will recall about 135,000 Model S and X vehicles in the U.S. after a months-long investigation by the nation’s auto-safety regulator concluded their touch screens are defective.
Tesla equipped certain Model S sedans from 2012 to 2018 and Model X crossovers from 2016 to 2018 with Nvidia Corp. processors that are prone to wearing out, Tesla said in a recall report. The flaw can lead to the loss of the rear-view camera display and other issues.
Earlier this month, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration sent a letter to Tesla saying it had determined the failures constituted a defect. While the company disagrees with the finding, it will voluntarily initiate a recall and replace memory devices within the processors.
NHTSA opened a preliminary investigation into the issue in June and upgraded the probe to an engineering analysis in November. The agency had asked Tesla to respond to its defect finding no later than Jan. 27, the day the electric-car maker reported quarterly earnings. Its recall report is dated Jan. 29.
Source: Bloomberg Business News
