




lostrack wrote:I'd like to open the discussion, should anyone else be interested
Japanese consumers who test drove the car were impressed by its quietness. But the car comes equipped with the clip-clop sound of horse hooves hitting the pavement to alert pedestrians and other drivers.















amberwolf wrote:I have seen so many people come THAT close to being run over because they weren't paying ANY attention to what goes on around them, often but not always while wearing earbuds or headphones.



lostrack wrote:EU regulations are now / soon will be, asking for every electric car to emit a generated sound under 15mph.

Arlo1 wrote:I was thinking about this as I was at work today with the door open. I could only hear the tires only on most cars driving by at ~90-110km/h. Meening the engine noise on most new cars in almost non existant. I think they are over thinking this. People need to learn to stay out of the way of cars and car drivers need to be aleart!

Toshi wrote:Arlo1 wrote:I was thinking about this as I was at work today with the door open. I could only hear the tires only on most cars driving by at ~90-110km/h. Meening the engine noise on most new cars in almost non existant. I think they are over thinking this. People need to learn to stay out of the way of cars and car drivers need to be aleart!
The fake sounds being added purportedly for safety are for parking lot speeds, where road thrum and wind noise are nonexistent. In these situations a car not running its ICE engine (if it even has one) can sneak up on pedestrians easily.
That said, I think the idea is regulation for regulation's sake. Much bigger fish to fry.
With regard to the Audi e-tron's sound from the OP, I'm not a fan. I don't want the fake rendition of a jet engine spooling up whenever I take off from a stop. Motor and controller whine is enough for me, and thankfully I find it pleasant.

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