% NH media slow to provide details on weeks old item %

[ref
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVcrash-Speeding-teen-split-Tesla-X-in-half-on-fire-Rindge-NH-tp4692387.html
EVcrash: Speeding-teen split Tesla-X in-half &on-fire Rindge-NH
Neighbors helped save lives after fiery Tesla X crash in Rindge
Dec 31, 2018
]

https://www.concordmonitor.com/tesla-crash-new-ipswich-fatal-22971318
New Ipswich teen’s death is state’s first fatality involving an electric car
January 24, 2019  DAVID BROOKS

[images  
https://www.concordmonitor.com/getattachment/0140e826-b217-4987-904d-566992b1087f/teslaCrash-cm-012319-ph01
19-year-old New Ipswich girl was killed following a fiery crash on Perry
Road in Rindge last month involving a Tesla Model X electric car  / Courtesy

https://www.concordmonitor.com/getattachment/c18dd992-229d-4573-adf2-1f8c81f2b445/teslaCrash-cm-012319-ph02
Three local teens were seriously injured in a fiery crash on Perry Road in
Rindge Wednesday night

https://www.concordmonitor.com/getattachment/6cf10f1a-978b-4fed-b94f-c7703a14f534/teslaCrash-cm-012319-ph03
A 2017 Tesla Model X was split in two and caught on fire after a crash on
Perry Road in Rindge Wednesday night  / Michelle Barnhart

https://www.concordmonitor.com/getattachment/d416f86a-4fc8-4bad-b274-76e7045aed70/teslaCrash-cm-012319-ph04
A 2017 Tesla Model X was split in two and caught on fire after a crash on
Perry Road in Rindge Wednesday night

https://www.concordmonitor.com/getattachment/bb2a8292-9d4e-4030-9cbd-0958b0f18107/teslaCrash-cm-012319-ph05
]

The death of a woman who was burned when the Tesla Model X in which she was
riding hit a tree is the first fatal accident involving an electric car in
New Hampshire, raising the issue of emergency services’ preparation for
dealing with this new technology.

“I believe there’s going to be a lot of work with this, with us, with the
state, with Tesla, looking at what do we need to know,” said Rickard
Donovan, fire chief in the town of Rindge, scene of the December one-car
crash. “There have been a lot of inquiries I have been getting about this.”

The accident happened Dec. 26, when a 2017 Tesla Model X, the SUV version of
the electric company’s car, crashed on Perry Road in Rindge at about 8 p.m.
The vehicle broke into two pieces and burst into flames, igniting some brush
and trees.

Nina Colasanto of New Ipswich, who had turned 19 that day, was pulled from
the wreckage by friends and passersby. She died Saturday after a series of
surgeries treating extensive burns.

Colasanto is the first person in New Hampshire to die as the result of an
accident involved an all-electric vehicle, according to Michael Todd,
spokesman for the New Hampshire State Police.

The driver of the Tesla, 17-year-old Travis Olson of Rindge, and a second
passenger were injured, but not seriously. The accident is still under
investigation by the New Hampshire State Police, according to Rindge police.
Lithium-ion batteries

Electric cars are powered by hundreds of individual lithium-ion batteries
connected together. Lithium-ion batteries in laptop computers, cell phones
and other devices have been known to burst into flame, especially if they
get damaged.

A story after the accident in the Monadnock Ledger-Transcript quoted a
person living near the accident who described how the flames reacted after
the accident.

“So that was a lithium-ion battery that was on fire, which was pretty
scary,” Michelle Barnhart was quoted as saying. “Every time it hit another
cell in the battery it exploded again.”

However, it’s not clear whether electric cars like the Tesla are more or
less to fires or explosions after accidents, compared to traditional cars
carrying flammable gasoline or diesel fuel.

A 2017 study done for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
NHTSA, said that electric cars haven’t been around long enough for
conclusions to be reached about comparative safety, but concluded: “The
propensity and severity of fires and explosions from ... lithium ion battery
systems are anticipated to be somewhat comparable to or perhaps slightly
less than those for gasoline or diesel vehicular fuels.”

The Tesla Model X received top safety ratings from NHTSA in 2017, and was
the first SUV to do so, according to news reports.

About 174,000 vehicle fires were reported in the United States in 2015, the
most recent year for which statistics are available. Virtually all of those
fires involved gasoline-powered cars.
Copious amounts of water

Chief Donovan said it took at least a half hour for firefighters to put out
the flames at the Dec. 26 fire. He wasn’t sure whether the fire was harder
or easier to put out than a similar accident would be that involved a
gasoline-powered car.

“It took lots of water, copious amounts of water. They tried (fire-fighting)
foam, but it really wasn’t reacting to it,” Donovan said. “It seemed like
you needed a ton of water – we didn’t know, was it reacting to metals?”

However, he added, “I’ve noticed over the past few years ... it’s taking a
little more to put out car fires” for all vehicles, perhaps because of more
fire-reactive metals and materials being used in vehicles.

This uncertainty is a major problem for first responders, Donovan said.

The state’s Fire Safety Academy has held classes in dealing with fires
involving alternative fuel cars, not just battery-powered cars but also
those fueled by other liquids such as compressed natural gas. They teach
important facts for first responders, Donovan, such as “where are the
shutoffs? where are the main lines you can’t cut into?”

Donovan said he’d like to see training specific to electric cars, which are
likely to become much more common on New Hampshire roadways. But training,
he added, can only do so much.

“It’s like with a structure fire. We teach in the classroom, but until you
get a live fire, it’s hard to really know. It’s hard to duplicate in a
training environment – the smoke, the heat,” he said. “It’s the same thing
with a car fire.”

A major difference between battery fires and gasoline fires is speed:
Gasoline ignites almost immediately when it comes in contact with a spark or
flame, and the fire spreads rapidly. Battery fires typically take more time
to built the heat necessary to start the fire. Another difference is that
battery fires can linger and reignite more easily than most liquid-fuel
fires. Tesla, for example, has warned first responders that it can take 24
hours for a battery fire to be fully extinguished.
[© concordmonitor.com]




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