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Quiet Hybrids: Are They More Dangerous?

By KEN THOMAS   07/ 5/10 03:29 AM ET   AP

Quiet Hybrids

WASHINGTON -- The age of the silent hybrid may be coming to an end.

Gas-electric hybrids, propelled by electric motors at low speeds, are well-known for their quiet ride and great mileage. But their silence isn't always golden.

Some researchers and safety groups say that quiet operation – "hybrid creep" – can pose risks for unsuspecting pedestrians and the blind, who use sound cues.

Advocates for the blind have sought the addition of artificial noises in hybrids for several years, concerned that the expected sales growth of hybrids could lead to more pedestrian fatalities and injuries. Hybrids account for about 2 percent of new car sales each year but auto companies are expected to boost production in advance of tougher fuel efficiency standards this decade.

"This is an example of too much of a good thing," said John Pare, executive director for strategic initiatives with the National Federation of the Blind. "Cars got quieter, that was good. Suddenly they got to be so quiet that it added an element of danger."

The government's auto safety agency said in a research report last year that hybrid vehicles are twice as likely to be involved in pedestrian crashes at low speeds compared with cars with conventional engines. The study by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration examined circumstances in which the vehicles were slowing down or coming to a stop, backing up or entering or departing a parking space.

More than 4,300 pedestrians were killed in 2008, according to the most recent data available. The government has been researching the safety risks that hybrids and electrics could pose for pedestrians, particularly the blind, along with the elderly and children, for vehicles traveling at 20 mph or less. When a car is going faster, the friction between the tire and the road's surface makes the vehicle louder.

The quiet hybrid phenomenon already has its place in pop culture. In an episode of NBC's "The Office," paper salesman Andy Bernard uses his stealthy blue Toyota Prius to sneak up on Dwight Schrute and pin his bitter rival against a hedge. One concerned co-worker, watching the unfolding drama, says "the Prius is silent if he keeps it under 5 miles per hour."

Congress is heeding the warnings, adding sound performance requirements for hybrids and electric cars to an auto safety bill being considered after the massive Toyota recalls. Lawmakers could consider the changes this summer and car companies most likely would have to have the sounds ready to go three years after the release of new government rules.

Automakers helped develop the proposal in Congress and are moving forward with new artificial sounds that will be emitted from electric cars and future hybrid models.

Nissan Motor Corp. has produced distinct sounds for the Leaf, the electric car expected to go on sale this year, when the vehicle accelerates or moves in reverse. When the Leaf speeds up to 20 mph, it automatically will use a soft whirring sound that changes pitch as the car accelerates. When the Leaf backs up, an intermittent bell will ring to warn those nearby.

The Japanese automaker consulted with acoustic psychologists and Hollywood sound designers to find a tone that addresses drivers, pedestrians and the community.

"It was kind of like peeling back an onion. The more we worked on it, the more issues came up, the more of a balancing act it became," said Andy Christensen, a manager with Nissan's North American Technical Center near Detroit. Nissan plans to use the sounds on the Infiniti M35 hybrid to be released in 2012.

General Motors Co. wanted a more subtle chirp on its Chevrolet Volt, so it chose an alert horn that lets the driver warn an unknowing bystander.

"We didn't want to blast the horn at them and figuratively smack the people in the nose," said Doug Moore, a vehicle performance engineer for the Volt project. "We just wanted to tap them on the shoulder and say, 'Hey I'm here.'"

Other automakers are hard at work, too.

Toyota Motor Corp., which makes the top-selling Prius hybrid, is studying artificial sounds for hybrids when the vehicle is propelled by its electric motor at low speeds. Ford Motor Co. is working to bring external sounds to future hybrids and electrics, including its Focus electric car, expected in 2011, and a next-generation hybrid and plug-in hybrid vehicle planned for 2012.

Nancy Gioia, Ford's director of global electrification, said car companies should consider standardizing tones from future hybrids and electrics to avoid a cacophony of confusion on the streets.

"It can't be like cell phones where we all select our own sound and we tune out everybody else's but our own," Gioia said.

Some green car advocates have questioned the need for the extra tones and noted that the requirement could add more noise to neighborhoods. Paul Scott, vice president of Plug In America, said the sounds could help under certain circumstances, but drivers should have the right to activate the tones.

"After hearing how innocuous the Nissan Leaf sound is, maybe it'll be a minor irritant for us, but I suspect people will tire of it eventually and seek ways to disable the noise," Scott said in an e-mail from Japan, where he was test-driving the car.

Les Blomberg, who is the founder of the Noise Pollution Clearinghouse, said reducing noise from the loudest vehicles, such as trucks, buses and motorcycles, would increase the ability of pedestrians to detect sound. Adding sounds to hybrids, however, would simply enhance noise pollution and make it more difficult to hear an individual vehicle in traffic.

___

Online:

National Federation of the Blind: http://quietcars.nfb.org

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration report: http://tinyurl.com/y8vwe37

Plug In America: http://www.pluginamerica.org

Nissan Leaf: http://tinyurl.com/y5ckpck

Chevy Volt: http://tinyurl.com/y5ckpck

Toyota Prius: http://www.toyota.com/prius-hybrid

Noise Pollution Clearinghouse: http://nonoise.org/

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WASHINGTON -- The age of the silent hybrid may be coming to an end. Gas-electric hybrids, propelled by electric motors at low speeds, are well-known for their quiet ride and great mileage. But thei...
WASHINGTON -- The age of the silent hybrid may be coming to an end. Gas-electric hybrids, propelled by electric motors at low speeds, are well-known for their quiet ride and great mileage. But thei...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Altario
Among nerds, I'm cool.
07:34 PM on 07/06/2010
Having been in many factories that went from loud noisy deisel forklifts to quiet electric forklifts, I can vouch for the danger of quiet vehicles. People just do not pay attention.
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Aquiver
Corporations aren't people, Soylent Green is
05:44 PM on 07/06/2010
Any motorcycle riders here? When riding, you pretty much assume nobody can see you and that's how you ride. Nonetheless, riding a real quiet motorcycle seems more dangerous then one that makes at least a little more noise than a car, it is quite noticible how much safer it seems.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ron ray
Justice: Big Bird has a job, Mitt's a 47%er.
12:43 PM on 07/06/2010
vroom vroom vroom.

how silly. people complain about traffic noise, now they complain about lack of traffic noise. how about we let things sound like they sound?

or we can put whistles on bicycles and beepers on skateboards, k? been hit by both.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LonosCurse
Some may never live, but the crazy never die
01:16 PM on 07/06/2010
Debbie Downer is alive and well and writing headlines for HP.
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10:47 AM on 07/06/2010
So, make them noisier. End of question.
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09:19 AM on 07/06/2010
Dangerous only when they quietly hit you (me, anybody.)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LonosCurse
Some may never live, but the crazy never die
01:17 PM on 07/06/2010
THUMP!, Owwww....
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
08:02 AM on 07/06/2010
been there done that ,old Pennsylvania Law: Any motorist driving along a country road at night must stop every mile and send up a rocket signal, wait 10 minutes for the road to be cleared of livestock, and continue.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
planetmondo
Christian, Musician, Scientist, Citizen
06:42 AM on 07/06/2010
Fair enough and easy enough to fix. Mabye the sound of a horse trotting ,cantoring or galloping according to speed with a gasped bbpphhhphphphph whin it stops.
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05:51 AM on 07/06/2010
The coal-burning generating station is a noisy, nasty bit of business, though.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom95134
03:20 AM on 07/06/2010
I think that hybrids should have a speaker in the front grill and when they are in "stealth mode" the shark sound from Jaws should be played.
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senorlou
03:26 AM on 07/06/2010
LOL!
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senorlou
03:18 AM on 07/06/2010
Um...a recording of a combustion engine running while the car is in electric mode?
Check!
OK, what's next?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeff Majors
02:38 AM on 07/06/2010
LOL! I actually thought about it... I rode Pruis and thought it was WAY too silent. It's like "is it running?" I needed the tactile feedback or the auditory feedback. I like having some feedback so if it's perfectly still or too quiet, it can be confusing.
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senorlou
03:19 AM on 07/06/2010
Yeah, well did you like the mileage?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ron ray
Justice: Big Bird has a job, Mitt's a 47%er.
12:45 PM on 07/06/2010
that's because it's different. get used to hit. early cars didn't phonographs so they'd sound like horses.
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12:27 AM on 07/06/2010
I love my quiet Prius! I will NOT buy one if they make it noisy.

Did I mention I love my Prius?
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12:26 AM on 07/06/2010
Are you effinh' kidding me??? What's next? Motorcycle pipes on cars.


LUDICROUS!!!
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MED1025
Here to save the day
09:28 PM on 07/05/2010
So how many of these 4300 pedestrians were hit by a hybrid? Should they make a law that hybrids have to have the radio on real loud and the windows turned down while moving? Pay attention to your surroundings. That goes for drivers and pedestrians.

This belongs in the onion.
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senorlou
03:19 AM on 07/06/2010
Most articles do.
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07:13 PM on 07/05/2010
Another article paid for in full by the oil companies and the gas-guzzler American car makers.
As you will note, there is nothing whatever in this article to suggest high-mileage cars are serious danger to the blind.
It's pure fertilizer.
Second, this same story appears just about every year as soon as gas-guzzler sales dip or some other Big Oil, Big Auto indicator suggests car buyers are getting smart. Same exact article year after year.
Next we'll see the 'batteries are more dangerous than spent nuclear fuel," "electric cars can't drive far enough for Americans," " the electric grid will collapse if hybrid and electric cars become popular," and of course, " hydrogen fuel will explode and kill your baby."
It's shameless, and the only ones worse than the writers of this drivel are the publishers who so eagerly disseminate it in exchange for some big ad revenue.
At least next time try something we haven't read ten times before. How about this?
"Electric cars charged by solar and wind generators cause cancer in orphaned children!"
The corporations will pay really big buck to get that headline into the paper, or on the Huffington Post online.
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senorlou
03:26 AM on 07/06/2010
LOL! Fanned! YOu're probably right. This is garbage. Just play a recording of cows mooing - or a recording of a combustion engine revving when the car moves, and the problem is solved.