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New F10 M5 uses speakers to recreate fake engine sound in the cabin
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<blockquote data-quote="haywire" data-source="post: 26698" data-attributes="member: 16474"><p>Well, to compensate for the downsizing engine culture in the automotive industry, BMW had to do this to its latest M5:<a href="http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-20111031-48/bmw-m5-generates-fake-engine-noise-using-stereo/" target="_blank">http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-20111031-48/bmw-m5-generates-fake-engine-noise-using-stereo/</a>Copied from the article above:For a driving enthusiast, there's nothing like the throaty roar of a well-tuned engine. However, as vehicle noise regulations, technological advances, and general increases in build quality have continued to make vehicles ever quieter both outside and inside, some automakers have been seeking ways to preserve and enhance the visceral sound of an angry engine for their performance-oriented models. For example, Ford includes a sort of sound pipe that channels induction noise into the Mustang's cabin. BMW, on the other hand, has taken a different approach with the new M5's Active Sound Design technology, which artificially replicates engine noise in the cabin using the stereo system.What BMW has done is link the M5's car stereo system's digital signal processor (DSP) into the engine management system, which allows the audio system to simulate the sound of a twin-scroll, twin-turbocharged V-8 engine in sync with the actual 560-horsepower mill humming away in the engine bay. You'd think that with that much power, the engine wouldn't need any help making noise, but as you rev the engine or accelerate away from a traffic light, the car stereo will be recreating the bark and roar that you'd normally be missing from the driver's seat through the speakers. BMW says that its Active Sound Design system accurately replicates the sound of the engine over the full range of RPMs, torque loads, and vehicle speeds. The system is tied so closely with the ECU that BMW has matched it with the various power-train settings. So, the Sport or Sport+ modes also have simulated audible boost to match their performance boosts.This is sort of the opposite of the Active Noise Cancellation technology employed by Honda in its Odyssey minivan, which uses the car's speakers to cancel out cabin noise with out-of-phase sound waves, and an inversion of the Prius' Proximity Notification System, which uses external speakers to make the silent hybrid's presence known to pedestrians. According to BMW, "the Active Sound Design control unit ensures an even spread of sound across all five seats of the new BMW M5, while observing the legal guidelines governing noise emissions inside and outside the car."Personally, I'm skeptical that this system adds anything to the driving experience and am a bit worried that asking the speakers to pretend to be a V-8 and accurately reproduce music may be asking too much. At the very least, I hope there's an off button.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="haywire, post: 26698, member: 16474"] Well, to compensate for the downsizing engine culture in the automotive industry, BMW had to do this to its latest M5:[URL="http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-20111031-48/bmw-m5-generates-fake-engine-noise-using-stereo/"]http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-20111031-48/bmw-m5-generates-fake-engine-noise-using-stereo/[/URL]Copied from the article above:For a driving enthusiast, there's nothing like the throaty roar of a well-tuned engine. However, as vehicle noise regulations, technological advances, and general increases in build quality have continued to make vehicles ever quieter both outside and inside, some automakers have been seeking ways to preserve and enhance the visceral sound of an angry engine for their performance-oriented models. For example, Ford includes a sort of sound pipe that channels induction noise into the Mustang's cabin. BMW, on the other hand, has taken a different approach with the new M5's Active Sound Design technology, which artificially replicates engine noise in the cabin using the stereo system.What BMW has done is link the M5's car stereo system's digital signal processor (DSP) into the engine management system, which allows the audio system to simulate the sound of a twin-scroll, twin-turbocharged V-8 engine in sync with the actual 560-horsepower mill humming away in the engine bay. You'd think that with that much power, the engine wouldn't need any help making noise, but as you rev the engine or accelerate away from a traffic light, the car stereo will be recreating the bark and roar that you'd normally be missing from the driver's seat through the speakers. BMW says that its Active Sound Design system accurately replicates the sound of the engine over the full range of RPMs, torque loads, and vehicle speeds. The system is tied so closely with the ECU that BMW has matched it with the various power-train settings. So, the Sport or Sport+ modes also have simulated audible boost to match their performance boosts.This is sort of the opposite of the Active Noise Cancellation technology employed by Honda in its Odyssey minivan, which uses the car's speakers to cancel out cabin noise with out-of-phase sound waves, and an inversion of the Prius' Proximity Notification System, which uses external speakers to make the silent hybrid's presence known to pedestrians. According to BMW, "the Active Sound Design control unit ensures an even spread of sound across all five seats of the new BMW M5, while observing the legal guidelines governing noise emissions inside and outside the car."Personally, I'm skeptical that this system adds anything to the driving experience and am a bit worried that asking the speakers to pretend to be a V-8 and accurately reproduce music may be asking too much. At the very least, I hope there's an off button. [/QUOTE]
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New F10 M5 uses speakers to recreate fake engine sound in the cabin
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