Quiet Car Rule Making

Quiet Car Rule Making

 

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has released the long-awaited rule making for the Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act. This proposed regulation seeks to require hybrid and electric vehicles meet minimum sound emission standards in order to make all pedestrians aware of their presence. The public will have 60 days to comment after the proposed rule is published in the Federal Register which is expected to take place tomorrow.

Link to proposed rulemaking

Click to access Quiet_Vehicles_NPRM.pdf

 

Link to Fourteen Sample Sounds

 

http://www.nhtsa.gov/SampleSounds

 

Article from NHTSA’s web site

U.S. Department of Transportation Proposes New Minimum Sound Requirements for Hybrid and Electric Vehicles

Monday, January 7, 2013

Contact: Karen Aldana, 202-366-9550

Proposal Would Allow All Pedestrians to Detect Vehicles that Do Not Make Sound

 

WASHINGTON – As required by the bipartisan Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act of 2010 (PSEA), the U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is proposing that hybrid and electric vehicles meet minimum sound standards in order to help make all pedestrians more aware of the approaching vehicles.

“Safety is our highest priority, and this proposal will help keep everyone using our nation’s streets and roadways safe, whether they are motorists, bicyclists or pedestrians, and especially the blind and visually impaired,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.

Electric and hybrid vehicles do not rely on traditional gas or diesel-powered engines at low speeds, making them much quieter and their approach difficult to detect. The proposed standard, Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 141, would fulfill Congress’ mandate in the Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act that hybrid and electric vehicles meet minimum sound requirements so that pedestrians are able to detect the presence, direction and location of these vehicles when they are operating at low speeds.

“Our proposal would allow manufacturers the flexibility to design different sounds for different makes and models while still providing an opportunity for pedestrians, bicyclists and the visually impaired to detect and recognize a vehicle and make a decision about whether it is safe to cross the street,” said NHTSA Administrator David Strickland.

The sounds would need to be detectable under a wide range of street noises and other ambient background sounds when the vehicle is traveling under 18 miles per hour. At 18 miles per hour and above, vehicles make sufficient noise to allow pedestrians and bicyclists to detect them without added sound. Each automaker would have a significant range of choices about the sounds it chooses for its vehicles, but the characteristics of those sounds would need to meet certain minimum requirements. In addition, each vehicle of the same make and model would need to emit the same sound or set of sounds.

NHTSA estimates that if this proposal were implemented there would be 2,800 fewer pedestrian and pedalcyclist injuries over the life of each model year of hybrid cars, trucks and vans and low speed vehicles, as compared to vehicles without sound.

NHTSA will send the proposal to the Federal Register today. Upon publication, the public will have 60 days to submit comments on this NHTSA action.

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Author: stevekuusisto

Poet, Essayist, Blogger, Journalist, Memoirist, Disability Rights Advocate, Public Speaker, Professor, Syracuse University

0 thoughts on “Quiet Car Rule Making”

  1. I drive a Camry Hybrid and one of the aspects that I love about that car is that it is so quiet. It is a place of peaceful respite from the noise that permeates our world, particularly in traffic. I, therefore, am dismayed that the government wants to ensure that the vehicle is nosier. I understand that, statistically speaking, it will reduce traffic accidents, injuries and even deaths. How can one argue against that? Well, I’m torn both ways. The government needs to consider the overall quality of life for the many thousands of hybrid vehicle operators who operate these vehicles cumulatively over millions of miles and hours. The quiet environment has value, great value, in a cumulative sense for many people who do not want to give that up.

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