Motor Mixtape: Drivers Aren't Shifting, so Ford Wants to Pump Up the (Engine) Volume

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

In the 1960s, automakers wanted to put a tiger in your tank, but now Ford Motor Company wants a howler monkey under your dash.

The automaker was concerned that drivers used to “shifting by ear” aren’t getting the gas mileage their efficient, small-displacement engines were designed for, so it patented an acoustic device that mimics a bigger powerplant, Autoblo g reports.

Small turbo engines reach peak torque at low rpm’s, but that isn’t when drivers of manual transmission models were shifting, Ford found. Lack of sensory input is to blame — most drivers’ eyes are on the road, not the tachometer.

As a result, real world gas mileage suffers. The solution? Create the impression of more cylinders pumping away under the hood.

Ford’s patent would generate the noise of cylinders firing, and inject that noise into the vehicle cabin in the gaps between the firing of the vehicle’s own cylinders.

“This has the effect of creating a virtual engine noise to virtually increase the number of cylinders in an internal combustion engine,” the patent states.

Like supercar kit body dropped on a Fiero, the effect would be an outright lie, but the only people to hear it would be inside the vehicle. It would be less obnoxious than installing a coffee can exhaust tip on every new subcompact Ford.

When Ford talks about small-displacement engines, it means those with less than four cylinders, like the 1.0-liter EcoBoost three-cylinder found in the Fiesta and Focus.

Because the shifting issue only concerns row-your-own models, which are increasingly unpopular in North America, the invention — if installed at the factory — wouldn’t be experienced by many domestic drivers. At least, not initially.

Power-to-displacement levels are rising, so there could come a time when your F-150 has to mimic the sound of a V8 due to its lawnmower-sized motor.

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Ryno98 Ryno98 on May 10, 2016

    My 2016 F150 king ranch with the 3.5 Ecoboost already has fake V8 engine noise in the cab, and it's not a manual. It is not overly intrusive, but I don't like it. I would much rather have a quiet cab. I really can't understand why Ford introduced this "feature".

    • Tedward Tedward on May 10, 2016

      As I mentioned above vw does this too. It is fixable on those cars, but that's a discreet speaker that can be unplugged or disabled with diagnostic tools. Let's be honest, it's our fault. Everyone railed brutally against the advent of turbocharging and the loss of naturally aspirated engine notes and throttle response/lag. As a direct result we received small lag-minimized turbos and artificial engine notes. We were wrong, at least on the noise side of things.

  • Stuart Stuart on May 10, 2016

    My '85 944 has an upshift light. It seems ridiculous in such an anti-eco, sporting car. I dislike it, as it occasionally catches my eye, and I panic, thinking "OMG! One of the red warning lights just came on!" I'll probably figure out a way to defeat it someday. Meh.

  • Merc190 The best looking Passat in my opinion. Even more so if this were brown. And cloth seats. And um well you know the best rest and it doesn't involve any electronics...
  • Calrson Fan Battery powered 1/2 ton pick-ups are just a bad idea period. I applaud Tesla for trying to reinvent what a pick-up truck is or could be. It would be a great truck IMO with a GM LS V8 under the hood. The Lightening however, is a poor, lazy attempt at building an EV pick-up. Everyone involved with the project at Ford should be embarrassed/ashamed for bringing this thing to market.
  • Jeff I like the looks of this Mustang sure it doesn't look like the original but it is a nice looking car. It sure beats the looks of most of today's vehicles at least it doesn't have a huge grill that resembles a fish.
  • Doc423 SDC's are still a LONG way off, 15-20 years minimum.
  • CanadaCraig Luke24. You didn't answer MY question.
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