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A Deep Blue SL03 caught fire after its chassis was punctured while driving: The response was that two batteries caught fire and the fire went out on its own.

2024-08-21

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IT Home reported on August 21 that a video of a dark blue SL03 accident has recently attracted attention online. The video shows that a dark blue SL03 ran over a hollow floor tile while driving, and the floor tile lifted up and punctured the battery pack on the vehicle chassis, causing the vehicle to catch fire, and the owner quickly escaped from the car.



IT Home noted that DeepBlue CEO Deng Chenghao posted a message early this morning explaining the cause of the accident. He said the accident was caused by the vehicle tires pressing on hollow and broken stone bricks, which lifted up and pressed against the vehicle chassis, causing the vehicle to be airborne and fall violently. The sharp corners of the stone bricks pierced the battery bottom plate, puncturing two battery cells, and the battery cells caught fire. Because the battery bottom plate was severely damaged and the seal failed, an open fire appeared under the chassis.


Deng Chenghao emphasized that the fireproof, heat-insulating, smoke-control and cooling design of the Deep Blue Super Range Extender Battery played an important role in this accident. The fire on the chassis of the accident vehicle extinguished itself in just 25 seconds, and only two battery cells were burned, ensuring the personal and property safety of users. The Golden Bell Battery withstood the test. After the accident, the vehicle system and the backend big data security platform immediately reported the accident, and the Deep Blue team quickly contacted the customer to confirm the safety of the process.



Deng Chenghao also pointed out that some videos only cut out the clips of the vehicle catching fire, and did not show the process of the vehicle being lifted off the ground and the fire being extinguished by itself. He hopes to restore the truth of the accident through this statement, and emphasized that since the birth of the Deep Blue brand, more than 200,000 vehicles have maintained a record of zero thermal runaway accidents caused by batteries.