Tesla Inc. TSLA is abandoning the radar in favor of a camera-based Autopilot system for its vehicles.
What Happened: Tesla CEO Elon Musk said on Twitter that the electric vehicle maker is now rolling out “Pure vision Autopilot” in North America. This will be followed by the release of a Full-Self Driving (FSD) beta V9.0 based on the pure vision system three weeks later.
Musk added that the long-awaited FSD subscription service will be enabled “around the same time” as FSD beta V9.0. Tesla had rolled out a “beta” version of the FSD software to a small set of customers in October last year.
This is huge. Pure vision AP rolling out now (5/25), an update in two weeks (6/8), pure vision FSD beta v9 a week later (6/15), and FSD subscription same time (6/15).
— Gary Black (@garyblack00) May 26, 2021
So FSD v9 full release by end of 2Q if subscription service starting. $tsla https://t.co/WbV6b6dWD1
Tesla also said that beginning with deliveries this month, the Model 3 and Model Y vehicles built for the North American market will no longer be equipped with radar and will instead feature a camera-based Autopilot system.
The vehicles will initially lose some functionality due to the lack of radar, but this will be restored through future software updates, Tesla said.
See Also: Consumer Reports Slams Tesla's Full-Self Driving Capability
Why It Matters: Tesla’s Autopilot and FSD systems currently use radar, cameras and ultrasonic sensors to make decisions. Tesla's FSD is an advanced driver assistance system, while autopilot is part of all its vehicles.
Tesla has previously said it was abandoning the radar to switch to an all-vision system that is needed for full autonomy to work. Musk said in January that even if the cost of lidar sensors — used in an alternative approach by rivals — becomes zero, Tesla would not utilize them.
The move by Tesla also comes amid growing scrutiny by regulators about the safety of the company’s self-driving technology. A fatal Model S crash in Texas in April is the twenty-eighth Tesla accident to be investigated by the NHTSA, according to Reuters.
See also: How to Invest in Tesla Stock
Price Action: Tesla shares closed almost 0.3% lower in Tuesday’s regular trading session at $604.69, but rose more than 0.4% in the after-hours session to $607.35.
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