October 14, 2009

Hybrid Cars May Include Fake Vroom for Safety
By JIM MOTAVALLI
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/14/automobiles/14hybrid.html?ref=business&pagewanted=print


For decades, automakers have been on a quest to make cars quieter: an 
auto that purrs, and glides almost silently in traffic.

They have finally succeeded. Plug-in hybrid and electric cars, it turns 
out, not only reduce air pollution, they cut noise pollution as well 
with their whisper-quiet motors. But that has created a different 
problem. They aren’t noisy enough.

So safety experts, worried that hybrids pose a threat if pedestrians, 
children and others can’t hear them approaching, want automakers to 
supply some digitally enhanced vroom. Indeed, just as cellphones have 
ring tones, “car tones” may not be far behind — an option for owners of 
electric vehicles to choose the sound their cars emit.

Working with Hollywood special-effects wizards, some hybrid auto 
companies have started tinkering in sound studios, rather than machine 
shops, to customize engine noises. The Fisker Karma, an $87,900 plug-in 
hybrid expected to go on sale next year, will emit a sound — pumped out 
of speakers in the bumpers — that the company founder, Henrik Fisker, 
describes as “a cross between a starship and a Formula One car.”

Nissan is also consulting with the film industry on sounds that could be 
emitted by its forthcoming Leaf battery-electric vehicle, while Toyota 
has been working with the National Highway Traffic Safety 
Administration, the National Federation of the Blind and the Society of 
Automotive Engineers on sounds for electric vehicles.

“One possibility is choosing your own noise,” said Nathalie Bauters, a 
spokeswoman for BMW’s Mini division, who added that such technology 
could be added to one of BMW’s electric vehicles in the future.

The notion that battery E.V.’s and plug-in hybrids might be too quiet 
has gained backing in Congress, among federal regulators and on the 
Internet. The Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act of 2009, introduced 
early this year, would require a federal safety standard to protect 
pedestrians from ultra-quiet cars.

Karen Aldana, a spokeswoman for traffic safety agency, which is also 
working on the issue, said, “We’re looking at data on noise and E.V. 
safety, but manufacturers are starting to address it voluntarily.”

A Toyota spokesman, John Hanson, said: “I don’t know of any injuries 
related to this, but it is a concern. We are moving rapidly toward 
broader use of electrification in vehicles, and it’s a fact that these 
cars are very quiet and could pose a risk to unsighted people.”

A study published last year by the University of California, Riverside 
and financed by the National Federation of the Blind evaluated the 
effect of sounds emitted by hybrid and internal-combustion cars 
traveling at 5 miles per hour.

People listening in a lab could correctly detect a gas-powered car’s 
approach when it was 28 feet away, but could not hear the arrival of a 
hybrid operating in silent battery mode until it was only seven feet away.

Some electric-vehicle drivers have taken a low-tech approach to alerting 
pedestrians. When Paul Scott of Santa Monica, Calif., drives his 2002 
Toyota RAV4 electric car, he often rolls down the windows along busy 
streets and turns up his radio so people know his virtually silent 
vehicle is there.

Mr. Scott, vice president of the advocacy group Plug In America, said he 
would prefer giving drivers control over whether the motor makes noise, 
unlike, say, the Fisker Karma, which will make its warning noise 
automatically.

“Quiet cars need to stay quiet — we worked so hard to make them that 
way,” he said. “It’s the driver’s responsibility not to hit somebody.”

Mr. Scott has already warmed up to the idea of a car ring tone.

“It should be a manually operated noisemaker, a button on the steering 
wheel triggering a recording of your choice,” he said. “It could play 
‘In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida,’ or anything you like.”

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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