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US upgrades probe into 129,000 Ford cars over hands-free tech

The U.S. National Highway Traffic Security Administration said on Monday it is updating a probe into 129,222 Ford Automobile over reports of collisions including the company's handsfree driving innovation, BlueCruise.

The NHTSA opened the examination after getting notices of two deadly crashes last April, involving BlueCruise-equipped Ford Mustang Mach-E lorries.

The regulator said it is updating the probe to an engineering analysis, covering automobiles in between the 2021-2024 design years.

Engineering analysis is a necessary step before the NHTSA could require a recall.

The BlueCruise system utilizes a camera-based chauffeur tracking system to identify driver attentiveness and is utilized on 97% of U.S. and Canadian highways without any intersections or traffic signals.

The technology was introduced in model year 2021 and is currently readily available in a select variety of Ford and Lincoln vehicles.

In April, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). opened separate examinations into the 2 Mach-E crashes,. consisting of a Feb. 24 crash of a Honda CR-V in Texas and a March 3. accident in Philadelphia.

According to the NHTSA, in both fatal crashes, the. Ford Mustang Mach-E lorry was traveling over 70 miles per hour on a. highway throughout nighttime lighting conditions on BlueCruise mode. when it hit a fixed automobile.

The company stated these vehicles seem to have system. restrictions associating with the detection of stationary vehicles. while traveling at highway speeds and in nighttime lighting.

NHTSA stated it will further examine these limitations. and examine motorists' ability to react to circumstances that. go beyond such limitations.

Ford did not immediately react to a Reuters' request. for remark.

(source: Reuters)