[Diabetes-talk] From The Washington Post.

K C kcc86 at hotmail.com
Sun Jun 13 09:11:22 UTC 2010


That's great!  Hopefully, the other car manufacturers will use similar 
common sense.  Besides in today's world there are bigger fish to fry than 
excess noise.  Thanks for putting this on our list, Jim.


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "james sofka" <jamessofka at att.net>
To: "Diabetes Talk for the Blind" <diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Sunday, June 13, 2010 12:11 AM
Subject: [Diabetes-talk] From The Washington Post.


> Hi, all.
> For your information.
> Jim Sofka.
> Nissan makes the Leaf rustle; Car manufacturer adds noises to quiet 
> electric vehicle to alert pedestrians to its presence. by Peter Whoriskey. 
> It was  quiet. Maybe too quiet. With advocates for pedestrians and the 
> blind warning that hybrid and electric cars could catch strollers unaware, 
> the designers of the Nissan Leaf have added sound effects to the otherwise 
> nearly silent vehicle. After exploring a hundred sounds that ranged from 
> chimes to motorlike to futuristic, the company settled on a soft whine 
> that fluctuates in intensity with the car's speed. When backing up, the 
> car makes a clanging sound. Nissan says it worked with advocates for the 
> blind, a Hollywood sound-design company and acoustic psychologists in 
> creating its system of audible alerts. While silence is golden, it does 
> present practical challenges," a Nissan statement said. The Leaf is 
> scheduled to go on sale in part of the United States in December. Nissan 
> added the artificial noises as lawmakers and regulators study whether auto 
> manufacturers should be required to install warning sounds in their 
> vehicles to alert pedestrians. With more than 1.6 million hybrid vehicles 
> on the road, and the number of electric cars expected to rise with the 
> introduction of more vehicles like the Leaf, a number of safety advocates 
> have warned of the dangers to pedestrians. According to a study by the 
> National Highway Traffic Safety Administration last year, hybrid vehicles 
> are twice as likely as conventional cars to be involved in a pedestrian 
> crash in some low-speed situations. Others have argued that adding sounds 
> to cars works against decades  of effort by automakers  to make cars that 
> run quietly. Some electric car companies complained that silence is one of 
> the main virtues of the battery-run cars. Nissan's sound system is the 
> first created by a major manufacturer. The company says it is controlled 
> by a computer and synthesizer in the dash panel. The  sounds are delivered 
> through a speaker in the engine compartment. A switch inside the vehicle 
> can turn off the sounds temporarily, but the system automatically resets 
> to "on" at the next ignition cycle. At speeds greater than 20 mph, any 
> car, electric or not, makes significant noise because of the tires 
> slapping on the pavement, engineers say. The noises for the Nissan operate 
> only at the lower speeds. whoriskeyp at washpost.com.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Diabetes-talk mailing list
> Diabetes-talk at nfbnet.org
> http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/diabetes-talk_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for 
> Diabetes-talk:
> http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/options/diabetes-talk_nfbnet.org/kcc86%40hotmail.com
> 





More information about the Diabetes-Talk mailing list