Urm, sorry to point out the obvious... but don't most normal internal combustion cars produce almost no noteworthy engine-noise at all?
I'm a cyclist, and I listen out for the road-noise of cars rather than the the engine-note.
I'd go for Ride of the Valkyries - WagnerCiro Pabón wrote:Hybrids make no noise, so some people is asking for the car to produce some kind of noise, with speakers on the bumpers, to warn pedestrians and cyclists.
I want the enginetone of a Formula One engine, of course.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/14/autom ... l?_r=1&hpw
tommylommykins wrote:Urm, sorry to point out the obvious... but don't most normal internal combustion cars produce almost no noteworthy engine-noise at all?
I'm a cyclist, and I listen out for the road-noise of cars rather than the the engine-note.
I do not feel other vehicles' tyres while I am cycling.Giblet wrote:tommylommykins wrote:Urm, sorry to point out the obvious... but don't most normal internal combustion cars produce almost no noteworthy engine-noise at all?
I'm a cyclist, and I listen out for the road-noise of cars rather than the the engine-note.
Sure, so as a cyclist you understand how much you can feel / hear your tires. Hybrids have very low cd, and low rolling resistance narrow tires making hybrids quieter in this department as well. Anyone with a sporty car or an aftermarket intake you can hear coming.
Again a blind person might hear 1 car coming and not two if one was ahybrid.
Your on a bike, so it takes a certain amount of '---" to do it anyways. I have mentioned the unsighted twice in this forum, and these are the people that are being addressed. When a blind person is at an intersection, he is using every bit of mental power to hear the beeping on both sides of the street, so he can cross, straight. A blind person will have to trust these intersections.tommylommykins wrote:I do not feel other vehicles' tyres while I am cycling.Giblet wrote:tommylommykins wrote:Urm, sorry to point out the obvious... but don't most normal internal combustion cars produce almost no noteworthy engine-noise at all?
I'm a cyclist, and I listen out for the road-noise of cars rather than the the engine-note.
Sure, so as a cyclist you understand how much you can feel / hear your tires. Hybrids have very low cd, and low rolling resistance narrow tires making hybrids quieter in this department as well. Anyone with a sporty car or an aftermarket intake you can hear coming.
Again a blind person might hear 1 car coming and not two if one was ahybrid.
I can't say I've ever noticed a hybrid car on the road as I've been cycling... This could either be because I have never actually come across one or because they do not make noise in such significantly fewer amounts that I've noticed the silence while being overtaken and then realising that they were hybrid.
Regardless, until I see good proof that such cars really are silent and deadly, I will go on holding the opinion that anything fast enough to overtake me will be loud enough for me to hear it before I see it (and I'm by no means a fast cyclist, but anything fast enough to get past me would be travelling at 'normal' urban road speeds)
Maybe I'm just being big-headed and am about to be squashed by the next hybrid that comes anywhere near my rear wheel, but this problem is not one that worries me significantly.