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Why Should Electric Car Make Noise Or Not

The debate whether electric cars should make noise to warn pedestrians is heating up again. How do you feel electric cars should announce themselves?

I don’t mind a car that makes noise, as long as I can control the noise, record what I want and muffle it if needs be. Having said this, how do we set a warning system that works for both handicapped people and other cars?

There Are More Solutions Than Obstacles. If we can send three men around the moon and two on it, then think what we can do now and what we have barely started with the electric drivetrain. One thing our society is geared towards is conveniency and an endless string of rules, often time contradicting themselves. One such polemic is how quiet are electric cars. Sure this might seem like a strange one coming from the loud world of gasoline engines, but the lack of noise can be in certain cases a problem to some.

When The Government Weighs In. As usual, if nothing gets done, eventually the government steps in and decisions are made, not necessarily business savvy. In this case, the Obama administration is pushing for what it calls its "quiet cars" law to help impaired pedestrians avoid contact with an electric vehicle or other silent vehicle. However in this case, the proposed result in warning sounds are considered much too loud by the automobile industry.

The Big Boys Weigh In. Already two automaker, Toyota Motor Corp.m Volkswagen AG and other major Asian and European automakers raised serious concerns about the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's proposed rules mandating minimum sound levels to warn the visually impaired as well as bicyclists. They are part of trade groups representing Detroit's Big Three automakers, also.

Who’s Fault Is It? To this question, we must again take a step back and see the bigger picture. The electric car is here to stay, we can assume that much with facts and figures. But one thing that has become a growing concern over the past decades our society’s slow abandonment and lost of reason in many aspects of life. In other words, we expect more than we put out and this is a dangerous part of a growing civilization. Should we train people to beware anytime they are near a street or the whereabouts of moving obstacles? Of course. Should the areas where those vehicles operate be clearly designated? Yes, of course. But should it be loud and negate one of the most positive aspect of driving an electric car? Huh, no.

If you haven’t driven an electric car yet, the point might be harder to make since direct experience is always better than wordy explanations but in a nutshell, your first electric car drive reveals how torquey the electric motor is. If you are lucky enough to go into a performance electric car, then it’s like going from a quaint Disney Dumbo ride, to an upside down, electrically catapulted latest roller coaster technology. And the ridiculous notion that an electric motor, or other such nonsense, unproven wrong cliches turn out to be almost amusing. What are people scared of after all? Competition? Another choice of energy for cars? What is it?

Any moving vehicle, whether it be a car, motorcycle, airplane, train, or anything moving that can injure a human being should have some sort of announcement system, especially considering impaired people. A discussion I had years ago with Paul Scott, one of the founding member of Plug-In America was that it’s easy to get a little MP3 players, slide it under the hood and prerecord your message, such as: “Be careful I’m an electric car and I make very little noise!” Or the more to the point: “Move out of the road you dingbat!” All jokes aside, one car company that has struck an intelligent middle ground is Fisker Automotive with the futuristic sound of its Karma at low speeds.

As long as we can choose what sound and if how loud it can be, then it’s a good step forward. How loud do you think electric cars should be?

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