Analysis
Tesla FSD Takes a Dive: Owner Says Car Tried to Drive Into a Lake!

TL;DR: A Tesla owner's video has gone viral, showing his car on Full Self-Driving (FSD) attempting to drive directly into a lake, highlighting persistent safety concerns with the system.
Meta: Viral video shows Tesla FSD trying to drive into a lake, sparking safety debate.
Alright, folks, I've seen some wild stuff in my day, but this takes the cake, the sprinkles, and the whole bakery! A Tesla owner, Daniel Milligan, just posted a video that's got the internet buzzing louder than a beehive. He claims his car, while on Full Self-Driving (FSD) version 14.2.2.4, decided it wanted to become a submarine and tried to drive straight into a lake! Now, I ain't no marine biologist, but I'm pretty sure cars ain't supposed to swim. That's a new kind of "full self-driving" that nobody asked for!
When Tech Goes Rogue
Milligan's video, which has racked up over a million views faster than I can say "raw-dog," shows the Tesla clearly aiming for a watery grave. He even tagged Tesla and their head of Autopilot AI, Ashok Elluswamy, asking, "My Tesla tried to drive me into a lake today!" Now, this isn't just a funny little oopsie; this is a serious safety concern that's got people scratching their heads. We're talking about a system that Tesla charges big bucks for, and it's trying to take you on an unscheduled swim. I mean, if I paid for a driver, and he tried to drive me into a lake, he'd be looking for a new job faster than you can say "bail money!"
This incident is just the latest in a long line of FSD failures that folks have been documenting. Remember the Tesla that flipped a car upside down in May 2025? Or the one in China that crashed head-on during a livestream? And let's not forget those influencers who barely made it out of California before crashing on their cross-country FSD drive. It's almost like the system is still learning, and sometimes, those lessons come with a splash, or a bang, or a trip to the body shop.
The "Full Self-Driving" Conundrum
Now, Tesla rolled out FSD v14.2.2.4 in January 2026, touting it as a polished, fine-tuned build with upgraded neural network vision. But trying to drive into a lake? That ain't polished; that's just plain wet. Regulators like NHTSA are already scrutinizing FSD, investigating incidents of running red lights and driving into opposing traffic. And they've got over 50 deaths linked to Tesla's driver-assistance systems. These ain't just statistics, folks; these are real lives.
Electrek, the fine publication that broke this story, put it best: "A system that tries to drive you into a lake is not 'full self-driving' by any reasonable definition of those words." The problem isn't just that it makes mistakes, because all systems have limits. The problem is the Grand Canyon-sized gap between what Tesla sells and what FSD actually delivers. Elon's been promising "unsupervised" FSD since 2016, and here we are in 2026, watching cars try to reenact scenes from The Office where Michael Scott drives into a lake. It's funny when it's on TV, not so much when it's your car.
What’s Next
This high-profile incident will undoubtedly intensify regulatory scrutiny on Tesla's FSD system and its marketing. Expect increased public debate regarding the capabilities and safety of current autonomous driving technologies. Tesla may face pressure to further clarify FSD's limitations and implement additional safeguards, potentially influencing the pace of its autonomous rollout and overall public trust in self-driving vehicles.
Stay safe out there, and maybe keep your hands on the wheel, just in case your car decides it wants to go fishing.
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Eddie W
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