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this post was submitted on 14 Aug 2023
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I blame the driver, but if the above is true there was a problem with the Tesla as well. The Tesla is intended to disengage and disable autopilot for the remainder of the drive after a small number of ignored alerts. If the car didn’t do that, there’s a bug in the Tesla software.
I think it’s more likely the driver used a trick to make the car think he was engaged when he was not. You can do things like put a water bottle wedged in the steering wheel to make the car think you have tugged on the steering wheel to prove you are engaged. (Don’t ask me how I know)
What about: slow down, pull up to the right, stop the car, THEN disengage?
I think that's what it was supposed to do. I remember seeing a few videos about this.
IIRC it doesn't pull up to the side, but it does slow down slowly and safely until a full-stop.
Then the autopilot disengage.