I got this from another list.
Should the Sound of Silence Be a Bird's Tweet or a Jet's Roar?
To Make Quiet Electric Cars Safer, Engineers Bring Out Bells and Whistles

by Mike Ramsey
BRAILLE MONITOR, Vol. 55, No. 3   March 2012

From the Editor: This article appeared in the September 15, 2011,
edition of the Wall Street Journal. It shows that the advent of the soon-to-
come regulations has all of the car companies working on solutions that will
alert pedestrians to the presence of what would otherwise be nearly silent
vehicles. Here is what the Wall Street Journal had to say about quiet cars
and the attempt to make them audible:

From the Editors of the Wall Street Journal: Detroit-If a car zips through a
forest, and there's no gasoline combusting under its hood, would it make a
sound? Normally, no. But in a few years the government will require electric
cars and gasoline-electric hybrids to emit some type of noise at low speeds,
when their battery-driven motors usually run silent.
The promised rules-aimed at making the vehicles safer for vision-impaired
pedestrians and others who rely on aural cues-have launched auto makers on a
quest for the perfect sound.

The new electric cars are nearly silent, and that's a potential hazard for
pedestrians who are blind or visually impaired. The Nissan Leaf has added
sounds for when the car starts up and accelerates or backs up. WSJ's Mike
Ramsey reports.

Among those considered: noises reminiscent of jet engines, bells,
birds, flying saucers, and revved-up sports cars. In developing their
electric car, the Leaf, Nissan Motor Co. marketers initially saw the false-
sound feature as a branding opportunity, a chance to create a distinctive
sound, like a Jetsons jet pack, that would identify an approaching vehicle
as a Leaf. But a point man on the project, forty-nine-year-old Nino Pacini
of Grosse Pointe Woods, Michigan, had to rein them in.

"We've had the sound of an internal combustion engine for one hundred
years," says Mr. Pacini, who has been blind since he was twenty-three and
teaches others how to get around without sight. "And it's fine."

The near-silence of a battery-powered car is a point of pride for many
hybrid drivers, an illustration of its ability to run at speeds of 40 mph or
more without burning fossil fuel. The quiet ride has been a marketing point
for auto makers, who spend millions on insulation and sound-damping
technology to make cars quieter. It has been used for comic effect, too,
such as in an episode of "The Office," where the volatile Andy Bernard,
driving a Prius at low speed, sneaks up on his romantic rival and pins him
gently against a hedge in the Dunder Mifflin parking lot.

But for visually impaired people it's no laughing matter. A study
authorized by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in twelve
states showed a 50% higher rate of accidents involving pedestrians for
hybrids than for standard internal-combustion vehicles. The agency is
crafting regulations that will require sounds on battery-powered vehicles by
the end of 2016.

For its Volt, which currently has a warning bell that can be activated
by the driver, General Motors Co. is considering options for a continuously
broadcast sound.

"You need to recognize that the sound is a car," says Doug Moore, a senior
project engineer for GM. "It can't be things like ringtones or bird chirps."

Toyota Motor Corp. began working on sounds for its hybrids five years
ago, initially looking at using the vehicle's horn, having it tweet or make
short toots at low speeds, "but you can imagine that might become annoying,"
says Daniel Smith, a Toyota engineer. Last month the company presented its
noise at a gathering of the National Federation of the Blind in Orlando. The
sound is a hum, but Mr. Smith says, "I've heard people say, it's like, `Beam
me up Scotty.'"

Ford Motor Co., which will introduce a fully electric Focus compact
next year, is allowing the masses to choose its sound by voting on a
Facebook page. Ford doesn't describe the noises, but the four finalists
sound roughly like an alien spacecraft, a "Star Trek" tractor beam, a
muffled jet engine, and a normal gasoline engine.

Commenters are lending an ear. "It's super futuristic but has a nice
low frequency component that (to me) is distinctly automotive," said one.

The company won't say which sound is pulling ahead.

As with many automotive features these days, "People would like to
customize it-one day it would sound like a car, and one day it would sound
like a horse," says Dave Finnegan, marketing manager for electric vehicles
at Ford. But the goal is that people "can identify that a vehicle is
coming."

Sports-car maker Porsche AG found a way to make its electric car both
detectable and recognizable, giving the Boxster E prototype the same throaty
growl-projected through a speaker-as the gasoline-powered version of the
roadster.

"A lot of people buying sports cars like that sound," says Dave Engelman, a
spokesman for Porsche.
For the Leaf Nissan engineers employed a Hollywood sound designer and
got help from researchers at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, who
analyzed a hundred sounds-mechanical to ethereal, whistling to bells and
rings-in search of combinations easiest to detect.

Mr. Pacini and other blind volunteers, working with the Detroit Institute of
Ophthalmology, met with Nissan engineers last year to give feedback. "They
had a sound engineer trying to pick a cool sound for us," Mr. Pacini says.
"His idea of the sound was more like a Jetsons jet pack. That's too high a
pitch, and as you get older you lose ability to hear high-pitched sounds.
And most visually impaired people are older."

Nissan engineers had to be concerned about drivers' reactions as well.
"If it became frustrating to the driver, they could cut the wires to the
speaker," says Heather Konet, an engineer with Nissan. In the end Nissan
developed a sound with two main frequencies they call "twin peaks" that will
be broadcast from a front-facing speaker mounted in the engine
compartment. The whistling sound shuts off at around nineteen mph. Above
about twelve mph, tire noise typically becomes loud enough to be heard.

For now Mr. Pacini is fairly happy with the results. He points out
there is no rear-facing speaker to indicate that a car has gone by, another
cue blind people rely on to orient themselves. "What they came up with is
pretty good," he says. "Not perfect, but pretty good." And, he adds, the
extra sound will help a lot of sighted people as well, including those too
consumed with their cell phone conversations to check for traffic when they
step off the curb. "Blind people don't talk on the phone and walk," Mr.
Pacini says.


_______________________________________________
ATI (Adaptive Technology Inc.)
A special interest affiliate of the Missouri Council of the Blind
http://moblind.org/membership/affiliates/adaptive_technology

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