Ford F-150 Lightning fire wasn’t related to a design flaw, says battery supplier

An image showing a Ford F-150 Lightning in a factory
A Ford F-150 Lightning caught fire in a holding lot near the automaker’s Michigan factory. | Photo: DR/SP/Andia/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The Ford F-150 Lightning fire that broke out at a Michigan factory in early February wasn’t caused by a battery defect, according to a report from Bloomberg. In a statement to the outlet, Ford’s South Korean battery supplier SK On calls the incident a “rare” occurrence and says it’s working on a fix.

Ford abruptly halted production of its flagship electric pickup on February 4th after one of the trucks caught fire in a holding lot affiliated with its Dearborn, Michigan, factory and spread to two other vehicles. Both Ford and SK have been investigating the issue for weeks and still haven’t resumed F-150 Lightning production. SK has once again started to build batteries in its Georgia factory, however.

“We believe this was a rare...

Continue reading…



from The Verge - All Posts https://ift.tt/nsZ1dfH

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Gemini app finally expands to audio files

Is AI the end of software engineering or the next step in its evolution?

Amazon is offering a like-new Kindle Paperwhite 2024 for just $107