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Tesla applies for a patent to a system that detaches the subframe of a vehicle after impact

Tesla applied for a patent on a system to detach the subframe of a car after an impact in order to protect the passengers and/or the battery pack of a vehicle. I’d like to preface this by emphasizing that companies often apply for patents that never end up in a commercial product. I am not saying it will be the case for this particular system, but it is something to keep in mind.

The Model S and X are already safer than average vehicles with a 5-star ratings from NHTSA and the lowest probability of injury of any car ever tested by the agency. The company also introduced several autonomous safety features including ‘automatic emergency steering’ and ‘side collision warning’.DreamWorks Animation CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg even recently credited his Model S for saving his life, but the company keeps trying to improve the safety of its vehicles and this latest effort is quite out of the ordinary.

In a recent application for a U.S. patent, the company details a system consisting of a subframe for a vehicle with a front attachment to a crush rail, and a rear attachment to the vehicle. The subframe includes at least one initiator configured to “cause the subframe to fold downward in event of impact, the subframe configured so that the front attachment detaches as a result of the impact and the subframe is deflected downward, while the rear attachment does not detach.”

The company included drawings to explain the system.

The patent application is attributed to three inventors:

  • Petter Winberg; a 20+ years veteran of the auto industry, Principal Engineer, CAE Crash Safety at Tesla since 2011.
  • Mike Eckert; an automotive & aerospace systems engineer and consultant, who held a Senior Chassis Systems Engineer position at Tesla between 2010 and 2015.
  • Sachin Sawant; a Senior CAE Engineer at Tesla since 2011. He started at the company as a co-op in 2010. 

The engineers explained the “crash-absorbing” goal of the system:

One purpose of crash-absorbing structures can be to direct crash forces away from certain areas of the vehicle, such as the passenger compartment or sensitive components, such as an energy storage (e.g., a battery pack or a fuel tank).

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Avatar for Fred Lambert Fred Lambert

Fred is the Editor in Chief and Main Writer at Electrek.

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