FSD V14.3.2 on AI4: six weeks, 4,000 km, zero interventions.
We put Tesla’s latest Full Self-Driving software to the ultimate Pacific Northwest test. From the tight, rain-slicked corridors of downtown Vancouver to the aggressive elevation climbs of the Sea-to-Sky Highway, here is our real-world telemetry.
Telemetry Report from the Pacific Northwest
We don’t just rent vehicles at SachDrive; we stress-test the near future. Over the past six weeks, we deployed our newly delivered fleet assets equipped with Tesla's latest AI4 computing platform running Full Self-Driving (Supervised) V14.3.2. The objective was simple: clear a grueling 4,000-kilometer operational gauntlet across British Columbia without a single human safety intervention.
The test track wasn’t a sterile closed course. It included the chaotic pedestrian intersections of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, the erratic merge lanes of the Lions Gate Bridge during rush hour, and the blinding heavy downpours native to the Pacific Northwest. Navigating through standing sheets of water and faded lane markings that traditionally blind legacy camera networks, the vehicle's AI neural nets parsed the environment with human-like confidence.
The ultimate test arrived on the Sea-to-Sky Highway up to Whistler. With aggressive elevation gains, sharp hairpin turns, and unpredictable mountain micro-climates, the platform managed torque distribution and predictive braking flawlessly. Zero safety interventions. Zero uncomfortable jerks. The calculus has officially flipped: our guests aren't just renting transportation; they are commanding a premium mobility node that safely thinks steps ahead of them.
