Comment by DrammBA

Comment by DrammBA 17 hours ago

3 replies

Why is that a common failure mode in a crash? I can't think of a reason or bug that would lead to the doors locking after a crash.

brewdad 16 hours ago

I think it's a well intentioned safety feature that was never fully thought through. Locking the doors in a crash can prevent a passenger from being ejected from a vehicle. However, if there is no reliable way to unlock the door once the acceleration forces have subsided, you've created a death trap.

IrishTechie 16 hours ago

Most cars lock as you start driving, I assume the issue is they’re not unlocking when crashed.

giantrobot 16 hours ago

Fail-safe designs are more expensive because they require redundancies, fully manual linkages, or just non-centralized control.

The Cybertruck went with daisy chained PoE automotive Ethernet variant. The same cables delivering power to subcomponents handle data. Damage/problems in a single component can not only bring down the network but kill power to all the car's subsystems. It means less wiring in the Cybertruck (and lower production expense) at the cost of durability and fail-safety. Someone looked at TokenRing Ethernet and said "yes that is best".