Skip to content
The Tesla Model S at the Geneva International Motor Show in March 2016. Federal safety officials are probing allegations of defective cooling systems installed in early-model Tesla vehicles.
Petr Svec/Dreamstime/TNS
The Tesla Model S at the Geneva International Motor Show in March 2016. Federal safety officials are probing allegations of defective cooling systems installed in early-model Tesla vehicles.
Author
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating whether faulty suspension parts on nearly 115,000 Tesla Inc. cars can result in damage to the tires.

The agency said it received 43 complaints about 2015 through 2017 Tesla Model S and 2016 through 2017 Model X vehicles.

NHTSA said 32 of the complaints involve failures that occurred during low-speed parking maneuvers and 11 while driving — four of those at highway speeds.

“The complaints appear to indicate an increasing trend, with 34 complaints received in the last two years and three of the incidents at highway speeds reported within the last three months,” the agency said.

In a 2017 service bulletin, Tesla said: “Some Model S and Model X vehicles may have been manufactured with front suspension fore links that may not meet Tesla strength specifications. In the event of link failure, the driver can still maintain control of the vehicle but the tire may contact the wheel arch liner.”

___

(c)2020 Bloomberg News

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC