The Wall Street Journal
Stepped-up
efforts to nix the chirps, rattles and drones
By JEFF BENNETT
Updated Jan. 8, 2014
8:28 a.m. ET
After making huge
strides in damping engine, road and wind noise, car makers are facing a new
problem: Drivers are hearing—and being bugged by—a lot more interior sounds.
Jeff Bennett takes a look at how car makers are creating more hushed interiors.
Photo: General Motors.
It's a paradox of
today's advanced car design: The more auto makers succeed in muting sounds
coming from outside, the more drivers are hearing the annoying little chirps,
rattles and drones on the inside.
Now, after making huge
strides in diminishing the worst offenders—engine and road noise—auto makers
are going to new lengths to quiet their vehicles' interiors, fine-tuning
acoustics on everything from the whoosh of the climate-control vents to the
ka-thump of the door locks.
Some auto makers are
taking cues from airplane cockpit design, adding sophisticated
noise-cancellation systems to offset certain sounds. And parts makers are
conducting extensive frequency testing at the behest of car companies, only to
add a little extra padding here, mix some plastic into the metal there or just
remove an offending part.
Leigh Wells
Car Cacophony
Some ways the auto
industry is trying to damp unwanted interior sounds
Growl,
Gurgle
SOURCE: Gas engines
FIX: In some hybrid
electrics,a noise-canceling system uses in-cabin microphones to detect
engine-noise frequencies, then emits opposing frequencies through the car's
sound system.
Whine,
Whirr
SOURCE:C ooling and
heating system
FIX: Some companies
are eliminating whiny brushes in the air conditioning units; others are
rearranging the blower blades.
Ka-Thump,
Ting
SOURCE: Door-locking
system
FIX: To eliminate an
annoying metal-on-metal sound, one company is mixing plastic into the latch mechanism.
Whoosh,
Whistle
SOURCE: Door frames,
windows
FIX: Some companies
are adding transparent plastic into the windows. Another changed its door
design so the top edges fit into the side of the vehicle instead of wrapping
over the top.
Rumble
SOURCE: Road noise at
your feet
FIX: Auto makers are
trying a variety of new approaches, from testing different-width tire treads to
adding more sound-deadening materials in the wheel well.
Various
Outside Sounds
SOURCE: The neighbor's
snowblower, construction jackhammers
FIX: Thicker, sealed
windows, enhanced inner-door insulation.
"Ten years ago
most interior noises couldn't even be heard because of the engine and road
noise," says John Tepas, vice president of engineering at Mahle Behr Troy
Inc., the Michigan-based subsidiary of Mahle GmbH, an auto-parts maker that
produces such components as heating, air-conditioning and ventilation systems.
Recent progress in damping those sounds, he says, has forced manufacturers to
lower noise levels "even on little parts like the tiny motor that runs the
vent door that opens and closes in a heater."
At the sound-testing
lab of lockmaker Kiekert AG, in Wixom, Mich., engineers try to optimize latch
sounds.David Lewinski for The Wall
Street Journal
A hushed ride used to
be a bragging point exclusive to the luxury-car world, a sign of a car's
refinement. But in recent years, the quest for quiet has trickled into more
high-volume vehicles—and even the brawny world of pickup trucks.
In introducing its
redesigned 2014 Silverado pickup truck recently, General Motors Co.GM -0.25% devoted a 30-second commercial to its
quiet cabin, which the manufacturer credits to upgrades like enhanced baffling
inside the doors and thicker, better-sealed windows. To cut down wind noise,
engineers inlaid the cab doors so that their top edges no longer curve over the
rooftop, a design that had unintentionally created a kind of wind tunnel.
Car noise is becoming
a big problem for car makers. That's because, dealers say, more owners are
bringing in their new vehicles for repairs after hearing noises—even when
nothing is operationally wrong. The trips drive up warranty costs for auto
makers and hurt the perception of a car's quality, industry analysts say.
"It's frustrating
for the customer of a new car to come back and report a sound, only to be told
by the dealership that it's normal and there is nothing they can do about
it," says Mr. Tepas.
To quell the
frustration, quiet labs have been popping up around the car industry.
The electric Cadillac
ELR uses new noise-cancellation technology General Motors
Chevrolet now boasts a
quiet cab in its Silverado pickup. General Motors
Mahle Behr spent more
than $1 million to develop its Troy, Mich., sound-testing facility, which
includes two acoustic rooms built on shock absorbers to stop noise from
bleeding in through the ground.
In one room, the
skeleton of a car cockpit is connected to a massive air chamber, while a
tripod-mounted microphone records and measures every whoosh. Niranjan Humbad,
Behr's acoustic validation manager and a 25-year noise-tracking veteran,
listens to the sounds and reviews visual representations of them on the
computer to target problems.
Mr. Humbad and his
team have compiled a database of more than 1,000 noises caused by the motor and
blowers inside a car's heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) unit,
ranging from low throaty rumbles to a high-screeching whistle or chirp tone.
The database is used with computer software to help identify which sounds need
muffling.
The Hush-Hush List
Here are some of the
most muted cars on the road, according to Consumer Reports' most recent tests.
Audi A6
BMW 535i
Cadillac XTS
Chevrolet Silverado
1500
Chrysler 200
Hyundai Genesis
Lexus ES 350
Lincoln MKZ
Mercedes-Benz ML350
Ram 1500 Big Horn
Tesla Model S
(Source: Consumer
Union)
To develop a silent
blower for the HVAC system, for example, Behr engineers have begun
geometrically rearranging the blower's blades.
"Imagine a
hamster wheel lying on its side spinning around in the middle of a fat soup
can," Mr. Tepas said. "We cut the sound by changing the distance of
the blades on which the hamster's feet run."
Noises and sounds are
always going to exist, Mr. Humbad says. "The trick is turning down those
noise levels that the human ear doesn't like."
Or finding a way to
mask them. The 2013 Ford Fusion Hybrid and the new-to-market 2014 Cadillac ELR
electric-hybrid vehicle are among several cars now boasting "active
noise-cancellation" technology that electronically draws information from
ceiling-mounted microphones in the cabin to detect—and zap—unwanted exterior
and interior sound. The ELR runs on electric power and then switches to a
gasoline engine when the charge runs out.
"So the engine is
absolutely quiet when the ELR is running on electric and we didn't want to
break that spell when the gasoline engine kicks in," says Doug Koons, lead
noise and vibration engineer for the ELR. Once microphones pick up the sounds
of the gas engine, a microprocessor sends out a bandwidth of low frequency
through the car's audio system to cancel out that noise.
Mr. Koons says active
noise cancellation is a new frontier for the auto industry. In the future, say
engineers, auto makers may even allow customers to flick on a "white
noise" option.
To most consumers, the
"thump" of a closing door or lock conveys the quality of the
vehicle—the quieter, the better. "Sound, or in some cases the lack
thereof, builds on a consumer's perception of quality," says Gene
Petersen, a senior engineer and noise tester for Consumers Union, which
publishes Consumer Reports.
Lockmaker Kiekert AG,
which provides latch systems to brands like Mercedes-Benz
DAI.XE +0.10% and Bentley, has built an acoustic lab
at its 90-person production facility in Wixom, Mich. Kiekert has recorded
thousands of different door-locking sounds from its own products and those of
its competitors.
"A high-frequency
sound you get from metal hitting metal is usually perceived as bad because the
tingy sound is annoying to the human ear," says Mike Hietbrink, vice
general manager of the company's U.S. operations. "A lower sound like a
closing bank vault is considered more acceptable."
To minimize the ting,
Kiekert is experimenting with incorporating different materials into a lock's
construction. For example, mixing in or overlaying plastic onto the metal lock
latch that connects to the door's metal post creates a bumper against sound.
"Think of the lock
and catch coming together like banging a tuning fork on a table," Mr.
Hietbrink says. "That's what we are trying to change."
Write
to Jeff Bennett at jeff.bennett@wsj.com
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