Electric cars up to 3x likelier to hit pedestrians than ICE
Discussion
Oilchange said:
I think the important thing to remember is that childrens sense of judging speed isn't fully developed until they are in their early teens, so silent cars are going to be a greater risk to them. I hope the people who play games creeping up on pedestrians realise this.
From the pov of 'creeping up', obviously the driver in question is aware of the pedestrians, whatever age they may be.I made a slightly flippant remark, an attempt at humour... But I'm not actually creeping up on anyone, it just so happens that I often find myself rolling along behind a group of tourists that are having a lovely day out and are totally oblivious to my car being there. It's a funny situation as I know that eventually one of them will realise there's a large car trundling along a few feet behind them, it's an awkward moment tbh. But what am I supposed to do? If I beep the horn they'll jump and everyone will stare. I could stick my head out of the window and say 'excuse me' I suppose...
Or I could keep doing what I have been, just trundle along waiting for them to twig.
And in all circumstances when there's a possibility kids could be around, I see it as very much the responsibility of all drivers to assume they could do something unexpected and be ready to react.
swisstoni said:
My EV makes woo-woo noises and also something like dragging brakes. It’s certainly not silent.
It may even make more noise than ice at low/manoeuvring speed.
Indeed, some are more noticeable than others. My current i4 certainly seems to be more detectable than my old iPace, although to my ears I thought the iPace actually made the more obvious sound.It may even make more noise than ice at low/manoeuvring speed.
swisstoni said:
My EV makes woo-woo noises and also something like dragging brakes. It’s certainly not silent.
It may even make more noise than ice at low/manoeuvring speed.
Yep. Lots of EVs are louder than modern ICEs - not only on the fake noises, most are big cars that make a lot of tyre noise.It may even make more noise than ice at low/manoeuvring speed.
Even when I have owned offensively loud ICE cars you get many pedestrians wandering out in front of you without a care in the world.
The T-junction where my road joins the main road is only one lane wide and I'd say at least 50% of pedestrians won't look when they cross it.
All passenger vehicles that can run in electric mode (EVs, Hybrids, PHEVs) have to make a noise at low speeds. It’s called AVAS and is required for type approval.
Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
Jader1973 said:
All passenger vehicles that can run in electric mode (EVs, Hybrids, PHEVs) have to make a noise at low speeds. It’s called AVAS and is required for type approval.
Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
I think we all know they're now required to make some sound, as do both of those I've owned.Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
But I can assure you people don't seem to notice them so much in the busy car park scenario.
I suspect this is because they go from stationary to moving without an engine starting or any sort of revving, or more specifically all the sorts of noise pedestrians have used for the last century to determine that a powered vehicle is in their midst.
Them making some random noise in a busy touristy car park, kids playing, drones flying etc, a car making a low level spaceship humm might technically be at the same volume as a low rpm engine, but it doesn't always get noticed in the same way.
Jader1973 said:
All passenger vehicles that can run in electric mode (EVs, Hybrids, PHEVs) have to make a noise at low speeds. It’s called AVAS and is required for type approval.
Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
I recently discovered that there are some enterprising individuals out there that will provide you with noise defeat gizmos! From removing the reversing noises that many EV's make to eliminating the running at below 20KMH noise, I have to question the morality and legality of it all. Pretty damn sure its not legal, but I am sure they get around it with some BS excuse loophole. But surely its a safety thing and we can all agree that its there for a reason? Even if its for sight restricted people only? Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
off_again said:
Jader1973 said:
All passenger vehicles that can run in electric mode (EVs, Hybrids, PHEVs) have to make a noise at low speeds. It’s called AVAS and is required for type approval.
Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
I recently discovered that there are some enterprising individuals out there that will provide you with noise defeat gizmos! From removing the reversing noises that many EV's make to eliminating the running at below 20KMH noise, I have to question the morality and legality of it all. Pretty damn sure its not legal, but I am sure they get around it with some BS excuse loophole. But surely its a safety thing and we can all agree that its there for a reason? Even if its for sight restricted people only? Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
Tbh I don't see any of this as a problem. Cars are changing, it'll take a while for some people to adapt to those changes, including the new sort of sounds that identify a car moving.
In the meantime time, as said many times on these threads, the drivers of EV's tend to be aware that not all pedestrians are.. aware.
Jader1973 said:
All passenger vehicles that can run in electric mode (EVs, Hybrids, PHEVs) have to make a noise at low speeds. It’s called AVAS and is required for type approval.
Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
Are you sure this is correct. Our PHEV makes no noise at all in forwards. It make a weird warning sound only in reverse (sounds like a stone is stuck in a tyre, but it is generated noise). Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
Registered September 2023.
MrTrilby said:
Are you sure this is correct. Our PHEV makes no noise at all in forwards. It make a weird warning sound only in reverse (sounds like a stone is stuck in a tyre, but it is generated noise).
Registered September 2023.
It is UNR 138 and applies to anything that can be propelled backward or forwards without an ICE operating.Registered September 2023.
Having read it I think it actually specifies a minimum sound level, so AVAS isn’t needed if it already does that without the ICE running.
Jader1973 said:
All passenger vehicles that can run in electric mode (EVs, Hybrids, PHEVs) have to make a noise at low speeds. It’s called AVAS and is required for type approval.
Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
My 2021 December registered Polestar only makes a sound reversing, silent going forward.Basically they have to be as noisy as an ICE below 20 km/h.
So nobody who owns one built after that was required (July 2019 for new models, or anything registered after July 2021) is creeping silently round a car park stalking tourists.
TheRainMaker said:
My 2021 December registered Polestar only makes a sound reversing, silent going forward.
Ger it fixed then, it should do: https://www.polestar.com/ie/polestar-2/safety-feat...In reality you can't really hear it on the inside, even with the windows down - unless you drive very close to a solid wall with the windows down. It's barely perceptible with the car stationary, the sounds rises as the car starts to move, and more sharply with greater accelerator input to mirror an ICE rpm increase.
The power steering motor or AC compressor/fans in many EV's actually makes more noise.
swisstoni said:
My EV makes woo-woo noises and also something like dragging brakes. It’s certainly not silent.
It may even make more noise than ice at low/manoeuvring speed.
Our's does too. I actually find it quite annoying, but then I guess it's a good way to get people's attention. It's even worse in reverse, far more noise than a petrol car anyway. It may even make more noise than ice at low/manoeuvring speed.
Road2Ruin said:
swisstoni said:
My EV makes woo-woo noises and also something like dragging brakes. It’s certainly not silent.
It may even make more noise than ice at low/manoeuvring speed.
Our's does too. I actually find it quite annoying, but then I guess it's a good way to get people's attention. It's even worse in reverse, far more noise than a petrol car anyway. It may even make more noise than ice at low/manoeuvring speed.
Why is that suddenly a thing

TheDeuce said:
Yes it's a safety thing and is a good thing - it just doesn't always seem to work, I think purely because it's not the engine noise that many pedestrians are familiar with and subconsciously always listening out for.
Tbh I don't see any of this as a problem. Cars are changing, it'll take a while for some people to adapt to those changes, including the new sort of sounds that identify a car moving.
In the meantime time, as said many times on these threads, the drivers of EV's tend to be aware that not all pedestrians are.. aware.
As soon as there is any kind of typical urban, suburban background noise the sound from any modern, generic car evaporates into the ether. Tbh I don't see any of this as a problem. Cars are changing, it'll take a while for some people to adapt to those changes, including the new sort of sounds that identify a car moving.
In the meantime time, as said many times on these threads, the drivers of EV's tend to be aware that not all pedestrians are.. aware.
But it's also not technically 'sound' that inhibits pedestrians but fear. All the sound can achieve is to obtain the attention of someone who will still make their decision based on fear fundamentally.
It's why pedestrians have evolved from not walking behind reversing cars to the exact opposite. There is an absolutely massive gain for the human from both waiting 10 seconds for someone and now the vehicle will bleep at the driver to stop the pedestrian can weigh up that reduced risk of having their child hit against the enormous gain of not having to wait 10 seconds and come to the very obvious conclusion that it makes perfect sense to stick their child in front of a moving vehicle where the operator can barely see and has a tendency to think no one is so dumb as to walk behind a reversing vehicle.
But these are people from the club that includes such geniuses as those who push their child buggy out into the road between parked cars to check if a moving car is coming.
The people who cross in front of cars at junctions when say the car is on green, they don't stop due to any noise as the noise doesn't represent any level of fear in itself. It'll wake the zombie element up who are just following blindly but those who make explicit risk calculations aren't inhibited. Only by physically moving the large object at them so they begin to respond.
Having EVs make sound is obviously sensible but it's not some miraculous cure and the true reality is that the more an object is programmed to give way to humans the more humans will adapt to take advantage and make those objects bow before them. Fear is a core human inhibitor. Remove it and we all change to take direct personal advantage of the new lower risk.
The moment society begins to believe that the technology in cars that allows the car to detect pedestrians and stop before them is competent then society will begin to simply not be spending any time waiting for cars. The ability for a car to progress down a road will see a shift of control to the pedestrian with the driver in the car removed from the equation.
In environments where pedestrians, on the whole, make the cultural decision to wait on pavements such as Vancouver and remote outposts of the U.K. then cars will still make fair progress along roads where pedestrians are on pavements. Conversely, in the environments where the pedestrian is the Lord God himself and born for all to bow before one's greatness or basically where large numbers of people are running risk calculation and using that to override manners, civility, common sense etc then cars will simply cease to make progress.
TfL won't need to actually ban cars from Z1 they're just going to stop working as cars the second Londoners realise they are programmed to give way near infallibly to us.

The removal of pedestrian fear due to the application of competent and perfectly sensible technology to cars is one of those impending changes that is going to be really quite big. And we'll first notice it due to an idiot Londoner taking an Airbnb out in the sticks and getting mown down by someone in an older car but what starts in places like London just ripples out and the relationship between car and pedestrian will alter massively.
It's one of those things that will probably be blamed on EVs but has nothing to do with them.
TheDeuce said:
That's the bit that confuses me. I don't see why adding noise to an EV to replace engine noise, also means so many of them need to sound like an artic truck when reversing!?
Why is that suddenly a thing
There used to be a truck that went past our office every morning that would very loudly announce when it was turning left too. That is in additional to the huge sign on the back advising of its blind spot. Yet still cyclists and e-scooter riders would merrily go up the inside of him while he was turning left. Why is that suddenly a thing

DonkeyApple said:
TheDeuce said:
Yes it's a safety thing and is a good thing - it just doesn't always seem to work, I think purely because it's not the engine noise that many pedestrians are familiar with and subconsciously always listening out for.
Tbh I don't see any of this as a problem. Cars are changing, it'll take a while for some people to adapt to those changes, including the new sort of sounds that identify a car moving.
In the meantime time, as said many times on these threads, the drivers of EV's tend to be aware that not all pedestrians are.. aware.
As soon as there is any kind of typical urban, suburban background noise the sound from any modern, generic car evaporates into the ether. Tbh I don't see any of this as a problem. Cars are changing, it'll take a while for some people to adapt to those changes, including the new sort of sounds that identify a car moving.
In the meantime time, as said many times on these threads, the drivers of EV's tend to be aware that not all pedestrians are.. aware.
But it's also not technically 'sound' that inhibits pedestrians but fear. All the sound can achieve is to obtain the attention of someone who will still make their decision based on fear fundamentally.
It's why pedestrians have evolved from not walking behind reversing cars to the exact opposite. There is an absolutely massive gain for the human from both waiting 10 seconds for someone and now the vehicle will bleep at the driver to stop the pedestrian can weigh up that reduced risk of having their child hit against the enormous gain of not having to wait 10 seconds and come to the very obvious conclusion that it makes perfect sense to stick their child in front of a moving vehicle where the operator can barely see and has a tendency to think no one is so dumb as to walk behind a reversing vehicle.
But these are people from the club that includes such geniuses as those who push their child buggy out into the road between parked cars to check if a moving car is coming.
The people who cross in front of cars at junctions when say the car is on green, they don't stop due to any noise as the noise doesn't represent any level of fear in itself. It'll wake the zombie element up who are just following blindly but those who make explicit risk calculations aren't inhibited. Only by physically moving the large object at them so they begin to respond.
Having EVs make sound is obviously sensible but it's not some miraculous cure and the true reality is that the more an object is programmed to give way to humans the more humans will adapt to take advantage and make those objects bow before them. Fear is a core human inhibitor. Remove it and we all change to take direct personal advantage of the new lower risk.
The moment society begins to believe that the technology in cars that allows the car to detect pedestrians and stop before them is competent then society will begin to simply not be spending any time waiting for cars. The ability for a car to progress down a road will see a shift of control to the pedestrian with the driver in the car removed from the equation.
In environments where pedestrians, on the whole, make the cultural decision to wait on pavements such as Vancouver and remote outposts of the U.K. then cars will still make fair progress along roads where pedestrians are on pavements. Conversely, in the environments where the pedestrian is the Lord God himself and born for all to bow before one's greatness or basically where large numbers of people are running risk calculation and using that to override manners, civility, common sense etc then cars will simply cease to make progress.
TfL won't need to actually ban cars from Z1 they're just going to stop working as cars the second Londoners realise they are programmed to give way near infallibly to us.

The removal of pedestrian fear due to the application of competent and perfectly sensible technology to cars is one of those impending changes that is going to be really quite big. And we'll first notice it due to an idiot Londoner taking an Airbnb out in the sticks and getting mown down by someone in an older car but what starts in places like London just ripples out and the relationship between car and pedestrian will alter massively.
It's one of those things that will probably be blamed on EVs but has nothing to do with them.
We've uninvented Darwinism

My favourite illustration of how moronic we're being is: Council pays contractors to re-surface a road, man with clipboard comes along to check there work is good, the road is smooth, both lanes marked correctly and the road is free of obstructions to traffic.
But then an idiot gets run over.
Later on, the council pay more contractors to install a deliberate bump in the road they already paid to be perfectly smooth.
The speed bump ensures more idiots survive, breed and are now crossing the road without even looking - the speed bump is there, f

One idiot feels so safe they get run over again.
Council returns, pays more contractors to reduce the now deliberately bumpy two lane road into a series of chicanes, reducing it's ability to handle traffic by 50% and slowing everyone down.
All of the above expense is inefficient and will still fall short of making individuals safe. Teach people to be safe, to think, to observe the world around them, and none of the nonsense above is required.
I’m sure you don’t mean it, but that comes across as very motoristcentric, blaming pedestrians for stepping in front of cars.
You could equally argue that it’s extremely rare for pedestrians to give zero warning before stepping off a pavement. In an environment shared with pedestrians a competent driver ought to be looking for and anticipating these signals, and it’s every bit the drivers that fail to anticipate who deserve criticism for the installation of traffic calming. Rather than just “bloody pedestrians”.
You could equally argue that it’s extremely rare for pedestrians to give zero warning before stepping off a pavement. In an environment shared with pedestrians a competent driver ought to be looking for and anticipating these signals, and it’s every bit the drivers that fail to anticipate who deserve criticism for the installation of traffic calming. Rather than just “bloody pedestrians”.
MrTrilby said:
I’m sure you don’t mean it, but that comes across as very motoristcentric, blaming pedestrians for stepping in front of cars.
You could equally argue that it’s extremely rare for pedestrians to give zero warning before stepping off a pavement. In an environment shared with pedestrians a competent driver ought to be looking for and anticipating these signals, and it’s every bit the drivers that fail to anticipate who deserve criticism for the installation of traffic calming. Rather than just “bloody pedestrians”.
I find it interesting that the Highway Code has been updated now, and pedestrians always have the right of way. It wasn't like that when I first started driving back in 1990 in comparison. You could equally argue that it’s extremely rare for pedestrians to give zero warning before stepping off a pavement. In an environment shared with pedestrians a competent driver ought to be looking for and anticipating these signals, and it’s every bit the drivers that fail to anticipate who deserve criticism for the installation of traffic calming. Rather than just “bloody pedestrians”.
I do agree that you should always be anticipating, and expecting the unexpected while driving for sure though.
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