What The Hell Is Going On With Tesla Model S Wheels On Impact?

IIHS crash test footage of a 2016 Tesla Model S reveal a very disturbing problem with the car's wheels on impact, where they shatter...
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There’s no doubt that the Tesla Model S is a safe car; it obtained a five-star safety rating from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and Euro NCAP.
However, following crash tests conducted by The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS), it rated the car’s small overlap front crash test (conducted at 40mph) as ‘acceptable’ (out of good, acceptable, marginal and poor). IIHS had this to say:

The Model S, a large luxury sedan, earns good ratings in all IIHS crashworthiness evaluations except the challenging small overlap front crash test, in which it earns an acceptable rating. Despite lengthening the side curtain airbags to improve small overlap protection in the Model S, Tesla ran into problems in the test when the safety belt allowed the dummy’s torso to move too far forward. That allowed the dummy’s head to hit the steering wheel hard through the airbag. Measurements from the dummy indicated that injuries to the head, along with the lower right leg, would be possible in a real-world crash of the same severity.

By contrast, the Chevy Volt, Toyota Prius Prime and BMW i3 all scored ‘good’ ratings in this area. What’s more, the headlight crash test (yes, that’s a thing) scored the Tesla the lowest ‘poor’ rating, with the i3, Prius and Volt scoring ‘Acceptable’, ‘Acceptable’ and ‘Good’ respectively.

What The Hell Is Going On With Tesla Model S Wheels On Impact?

Of greater concern, however, is the behaviour of the car’s aluminium alloy wheel. On small frontal impact, the wheel cracks and dramatically shatters, further reducing crash structure integrity and launching projectiles into the surrounding area. (The wheel does not crack in the greater, load bearing moderate frontal impact test).
We reached out to Tesla and were given this statement (not directly related to the problem wheel, but hopefully something it will look into with immediate effect):

“We are committed to making the world’s safest cars, and Model S has previously received a 5-star safety rating from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and a 5-star rating from Euro NCAP. Model S still has the lowest ever probability of injury of any car ever tested by NHTSA.

We proactively develop updates and aggressively implement changes onto the production line in record time any time there is a substantial benefit to customer safety. One of the improvements recently introduced in January 2017 specifically addresses the “Acceptable” (or second highest) rating that the Model S achieved in the small overlap frontal crash test, and we expect new tests to yield the highest possible rating (“Good” rating) in the crashworthiness category.

Additionally, IIHS tested a vehicle that was in transition with new Autopilot hardware, but without the new software that enables Automatic Emergency Braking. In the coming weeks, Automatic Emergency Braking will be deployed via a free over-the-air software update, and IIHS will be testing a new vehicle. We expect to receive the highest possible rating in every category, making Model S eligible for the IIHS Top Safety Pick award.”

The combustible wheel doesn’t only concern me in extreme crash tests like this, because I now question what could happen at 100mph on the Autobahn if a pothole were to be struck or a stray object (like a rock or a piece of car) were to be run over…

Comments

Thug Bird

My, what shocking news!

caw caw

02/02/2017 - 12:36 |
4 | 32
The_Import_Kid

Well this is gonna be a SHOCK to Musj when he heard it. When he does his first thought is gonna be, “ WATT the hell am I gonna do?”

I’ll let myself out.

02/02/2017 - 12:38 |
2 | 38

That’s a WHEELy bad problem to have.

Hold the door for me mate.

02/02/2017 - 12:51 |
0 | 24
FLixy Madfox

This SHOCKING should SPARK tesla to fix its wheels…. yup. I jumped on the bandwagon

02/02/2017 - 12:40 |
0 | 32

Too… many… puns…

02/02/2017 - 12:47 |
16 | 0

Oh yes! Now I can say I got bottem comment! -16 points! That’s actually kinda funny

02/02/2017 - 18:54 |
2 | 2
ReX 7

I know The problem: it’s a tesla

02/02/2017 - 12:41 |
8 | 22
TurboToddler (Straight-five)

In reply to by ReX 7

What’s wrong with Teslas?

02/02/2017 - 12:43 |
4 | 0
Fortunes

We all know the safest car out there is a Volvo.

02/02/2017 - 12:53 |
24 | 6

Yeah, because you can’t wreck a car that’s broken down in your driveway.

02/02/2017 - 14:01 |
14 | 44
ModernChaos

I should make an electricity pun to get to the top, but I don’t know watt to put

02/02/2017 - 12:54 |
2 | 30
Anonymous

Wheels made in China

02/02/2017 - 12:55 |
4 | 8
Ali Mahfooz

Can we get something original other than the puns? Feels like everybody is beating a dead horse.

02/02/2017 - 12:58 |
106 | 2

Thank you

02/02/2017 - 13:06 |
18 | 2

Yeah, these puns are wheely getting old, the sense of humor here seems to have hit a wall.

02/02/2017 - 19:03 |
46 | 4
Timmy Tam

Most cars does the same on iihs tests

02/02/2017 - 13:03 |
8 | 4

No they don’t. Some wheels collapse, but don’t shatter like that

02/02/2017 - 13:20 |
8 | 6
Anonymous

Safety engineer here: could very well be that it is a clever “predetermined breaking point” as most cars in the small overlap have problems with the wheel piercing into the passanger cell. I think this situation has much more load on the wheel than a simple pothole.

02/02/2017 - 13:03 |
96 | 2
Unknown

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I thought the same thing. If it’s designed to do that, awesome. If it’s not, that’s probably bad lol

02/02/2017 - 14:05 |
20 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

That what i was thinking. Aren’t the wheels on the XC90 designed to do this as well once the stress gets to a certain point?

02/02/2017 - 16:37 |
4 | 0
Pooft Lee

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

It’s a thought, but I’d rather my wheels weren’t designed to fail catastrophically at some set stress.

People are in a tiff because this is something that rarely happens in these tests. Most wheels deform, but these are brittle, not tough. It says something about their aluminum processes, and some owners on larger option wheels have had random cracks and odd failures that stop the wheel from holding air.

As exciting as it is to make a tiff out of it though, the wheel clearly stops at the passenger compartment, and has nowhere to go but try and absorb a 40 mile an hour crash. I don’t think the wheel quite performed as intended, but I’m sure plenty of people at Tesla are looking at it

02/02/2017 - 17:06 |
6 | 2

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