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Why Electric Cars Are Getting Louder

Electric vehicles are notoriously quiet. But new laws are pushing automakers to experiment with unusual noises.

Credit: Smile Fight/Shutterstock

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This story appeared in the September/October 2020 of Discover magazine as "Sound Off." We hope you’ll subscribe to Discover and help support science journalism at a time when it’s needed the most.

Six years ago, three Volvo engineers sat on a forest floor in western Sweden, picking twigs off the ground and snapping them in half.

“We were in the woods for two days sampling sounds,” recalls Fredrik Hagman, a sound designer at the company. Three hundred sticks later, they returned to the automaker’s headquarters in Gothenburg, Sweden.

There, they tweaked the sound and pitch of the twig’s snap to create the click of the turn signal indicator used on Volvo’s new electric SUV, the XC40 Recharge.

Car companies have always used sound to enhance a car’s personality and boost the perception of its performance. An effective acoustic signature announces the car long before its arrival, and enthusiasts can identify ...

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