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America’s best-selling cars and trucks are built on lies: The rise of fake engine noise [View all]
Americas best-selling cars and trucks are built on lies: The rise of fake engine noise
Economy
By Drew Harwell January 21 at 11:17 AM
@drewharwell
drew.harwell@washpost.com
Stomp on the gas in a new Ford Mustang or F-150 and youll hear a meaty, throaty rumble the same style roar that Americans have associated with auto power and performance for decades.
Its a sham. The engine growl in some of Americas best-selling cars and trucks is actually a finely tuned bit of lip-syncing, boosted through special pipes or digitally faked altogether. And its driving car enthusiasts insane.
....
Which raises a more existential question: Does it matter if the sound is fake? A driver who didnt know the difference might enjoy the thrum and thunder of it nonetheless. Is taking the best part of an eight-cylinder revv and cloaking a better engine with it really, for carmakers, so wrong?
Not everyone is so diplomatic. Karl Brauer, a senior analyst with Kelley Blue Book, says automakers should stop the lies and get real with their drivers. ... If youre going to do that stuff, do that stuff. Own it. Tell customers: If you want a V8 rumble, youve gotta buy a V8 that costs more, gets worse gas mileage and hurts the Earth, Brauer said. Youre fabricating the cars sexiness. Youre fabricating performance elements of the car that dont actually exist. That just feels deceptive to me.
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