Should hybrids be making more noise?


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Hybrid Vehicle Pedestrian Warning Sounds deliver AVAS acoustic alerts for hybrids and EVs, helping blind pedestrians. Toyota Prius-led panels in Japan explore regulations, low-speed engine-like tones, and radar to detect pedestrians.

 

What's Behind the News

Audible AVAS systems on hybrids and EVs that emit low-speed alerts so blind pedestrians can detect nearby vehicles.

  • Japan convenes automakers, blind groups, and consumers
  • Alerts trigger only at low speeds to aid detection
  • Tones may mimic engines or use musical chimes
  • Radar may sense pedestrians and cue the sounder
  • Driven by Prius, Insight, and i-MiEV sales growth

 

An appeal of a hybrid or electric car is its super-quiet drive. But worries are growing blind people may be endangered by their silence.

 

The Japanese government has set up a panel with automakers, organizations for the blind and consumers groups to come up with a solution, sound for safety proposals that could have such vehicles emitting what sounds like engine noise or musical sounds like a cell-phone ring-tone, officials said.

A legal change would be needed to equip the vehicles with such special features.

"We are still listening to different opinions and trying to figure out the best solution," said Yuta Kaga, spokesman for Toyota Motor Corp., with a green battery plant underway, which makes the hit gas-electric Prius hybrid and is represented on the panel.

The panel, which began meeting in July, plans to have a proposal by the end of the year, according to the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism.

It was set up partly in response to worries voiced by the blind. The Japan Federation of the Blind, which submitted a request in June, is asking the government to instruct hybrid-makers to make the vehicles safer for the blind.

An informal survey of 52 blind people carried out by the group last year found that more than half of the respondents said they were terrified of hybrids because they were so quiet, although none reported being in an accident.

The Yomiuri, Japan's biggest newspaper reported that such measures may be available on Toyota cars going on sale in 2010, possibly with radar to sense nearby pedestrians and, amid anti-noise activism, making noise only at slow speeds.

Such measures are more useful for Japan's crowded streets than the U.S. and other nations where cases of pedestrians getting hit by a car are fewer.

Sales of hybrids are booming in Japan because of government incentives and tax breaks to encourage green car sales.

Toyota's Prius has been the top-selling car in Japan for four months straight. Honda Motor Co.'s Insight hybrid is also selling well, and Toyota and Honda developments suggest hybrid models are expected to keep growing.

Mitsubishi Motors Corp. began selling the i-MiEV electric car this year, and other makers are planning electric vehicles while rolling out electric and hybrid hopes across lineups.

 

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