• Fondots@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’m not much of a car guy, and generally speaking I like cars to be quiet.

    That said, there are some very wealthy neighborhoods in my area, so I’ve occasionally found myself sharing the road with Lamborghinis and Ferraris and other ridiculously high-end cars, and I kind of get it. There’s something different about the way these kinds of cars sound and it’s kind of hard to explain, but unlike every other loud car out there that makes me mad the moment I hear them, these sorts of cars actually sound good, and it definitely has to be part of the experience of owning/driving one, and let’s face it, the kinds of rich assholes who buy them are in it 100% for the experience and not because they need a car.

  • Hazdaz@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    As it should. Sound is a huge part of getting that adrenaline rush when driving a car. Dead silence won’t do, that’s for sure.

  • bstix
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    1 year ago

    The whole topic of artificial sound for EVs is overblown. History repeats itself. When cars were first invented, it was required that a man walked with a red flag in front of the car to warn people on the street.

    Hopefully we will eventually just get used to silent cars. The only place it makes a little sense is in the parking lots, where there are already many other silent vehicles like electric scooters, bicycles or pedestrians. Get used to cars also moving silenty at slow speeds.

    The journalist or editor of the article seems a little confused about what the technical officer actually said. Adding the word “that’s” in between the perfect valid quoted words “sound designed” changes the meaning ever so slightly. All sounds in cars are designed, but it doesn’t necessarily mean that sounds are added artificially like the article implies. The mentioned 1% that is artificially added to their existing cars is for stuff like gadgets and blinkers, because lights doesn’t make sound. Amplifying and filtering sounds isn’t really artificial, it’s just design. What they’re saying makes sense. They don’t want “a man to walk a flag in front of the car”.

    Anyway, maybe it’s just me, but when I read the article I get the impression that the journalist assumes that all the stupid electric cars needs to have ice-cream truck jingles playing constantly.

    • bagelberger@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’d actually prefer to be able to hear if a 2-ton box of metal is coming towards me, but to each their own

    • TIN@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      Even more so, when cars first came out it was discussed they should make an artificial horse noise. (I heard this once and believed it to be true but can’t now find a source)

      Skeuomorphia, when a new product needlessly reproduces features of an older one. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skeuomorph