Fixbear
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Frank
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- retired, Construction Mechanic, Refrigeration tech, Ford, GMC, Chevy tech,
I know that most states collect fire data. I used to make out the incident reports. So likely the only source would likely be NFPAI don’t blame you for not knowing this, but this “autoinsuranceEZ” thing about EV fires is completely fabricated BS.
Just look at the numbers and think about it.
3500 car fires per 100,000 vehicle sales?
There are about 300,000 cars in my town. You would notice if over 11,000 of them caught fire.
There is no official source that tracks vehicle fires nor the source of them. But we do know that autoinsuranceEZ is definitely False.
More details from a legitimate source that questioned those silly figures:
https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40163966/cars-catching-fire-new-york-times-real-statistics/
No, Millions of Cars Are Not Catching Fire Every Year
A New York Times story about U.S. car fires references a study that gets the frequency wrong by a factor of at least 60.
By Ezra DyerPublished: Jun 2, 2022
You don't have to be a professional statistician to notice that these AutoInsuranceEZ numbers look a wee bit questionable. Because, EVs and hybrids aside, if 1530 conventional internal-combustion cars (aka, "most of the cars") are catching fire per 100,000 vehicles, that would equate to millions of car fires each year—as of 2020, there were roughly 270 million registered passenger vehicles in the US. Imagine that: You'd definitely know someone whose car caught fire. Maybe your car caught fire. It might be on fire right now! "Oh, another car fire," you'd say, driving past the third conflagration of your morning commute.
To try to figure out where these numbers came from, we first contacted the National Transportation Safety Board, purported source for the car-fire statistics. And the NTSB's spokesman told us, "There is no NTSB database that tracks highway vehicle fires. We do not know what data AutoInsuranceEZ used for its research, but it did not come from an NTSB database." They suggested that perhaps the study authors confused the NTSB with NHTSA, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. So we contacted NHTSA.
And guess what? NHTSA doesn't collect fire data in this way, either. NHTSA—which we should call "the NHTSA," but that sounds weird—collects data on crashes but says that only about 5 percent of fires are crash-related. So they rely on other sources for information, like the National Fire Incident Reporting System (NFIRS). Which, in any case, doesn't categorize fires according to the type of vehicle powertrain.
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