Posted on 11/05/2002 7:34:37 AM PST by H8DEMS
(CNSNews.com) - A national organization devoted to fighting noise pollution has taken its battle to the streets, to combat loud exhaust systems installed in cars after they are sold.
Noise Free America spokesman Mark Huber says the manufacturers of hot rod mufflers are selling a product that is "lawlessly terrorizing" neighborhoods across America.
The Richmond, Va.-based group insists that noise pollution is a serious health hazard. It mentions hearing damage, sleep deprivation, aggression, chronic fatigue and high blood pressure as specific maladies stemming from our noisy world.
Noise Free America recently awarded Flowmaster, Inc., a manufacturer of high- performance, after-market mufflers and exhaust systems, with its Noisy Dozen award, an "honor" given to the nation's worst noise polluters.
According to Huber, Flowmaster was singled out for aggressively marketing products that bother people and are even illegal in some states. He said Flowmaster and other companies that distribute the noisy mufflers systems specifically boast about the "deep aggressive tone" or "deep throaty rumble" that their products produce.
A diverse cross-section of teens and twenty-somethings are installing the equipment that sells for thousands of dollars.
An article in Flowmaster's customer magazine, Power Press, acknowledges that there's a strong demand for loud exhaust systems: "Market surveys continually show...that many buyers purchase a Flowmaster system because of its unique and distinctive sound."
But Huber said he sees nothing desirable in Flowmaster's product line.
"For some reason, both fans of after-market exhausts and 'boom cars' seem to be obsessed with the lower frequency noises, which can disturb more people at a greater distance in all directions from their vehicle," he said. "Sounds of a lower pitch or frequency travel further and penetrate solids, such as windows and exterior walls of homes more easily than sounds of a higher pitch."
Illegal equipment
According to Huber, it is completely legal for manufacturers such as Flowmaster to market and sell their exhaust systems. However, he said, as soon as the car owner installs the equipment and hits the road, that car owner could be breaking the law.
Huber said approximately 40 states prohibit the modification of exhaust systems contrary to factory specifications. Virginia is one such state, he said.
Virginia's State Code (Sec. 46.2-1049) specifically states, "No person shall drive and no owner of a motor vehicle shall permit or allow the operation of any vehicle on a highway unless it is equipped with an exhaust system of a type installed as standard factory equipment, or comparable to that designed for use on the particular vehicle as standard factory equipment, in good working order and in constant operation to prevent excessive or unusual noise."
But he said local and state police are lax in their enforcement of the state code in cases where vehicles equipped with noisy after-market exhaust systems are clearly in violation of the law.
Contrary to Huber's observation, Virginia State Police spokesman Sergeant Morris said the law enforcement officers statewide are cracking down on illegally installed exhaust systems; it's just that some counties don't enforce the law as strictly as others, he said.
"Different people have different things that they go after, fortunately or unfortunately," Morris said. "They have some police officers in Chesterfield County who are sticklers for those mufflers."
He said Chesterfield County's local police force writes a lot of tickets for vehicles with noisy mufflers because the devices are not standard factory equipment, nor are they compatible with standard factory equipment, as state code mandates.
However, Morris said judges in Virginia's county court system often rule against officers who issued tickets for noise violations. "Some will convict, some won't," he said.
Assault on freedom
Huber believes that people who purchase noisy mufflers see them as "some sort of extension of their personality that they want to share with the whole world."
"That's where the line is crossed," he said. "That's where they take away my freedom and they rob quiet off of my property and out of my personal space."
Aside from being a threat to public safety and an assault on the quality of life, Huber believes the tailpipe rumblings also affect the property values of homes within earshot of the hot rods.
He pointed to studies showing that homes located near airports lose almost two percent of their property value per decibel level emitted by jumbo jets. Similarly, he said, owners of vehicles that produce "aggressive, muscle car sound" may decrease the value of homes.
Noise Free America takes a grassroots approach to noise pollution. It lobbies politicians, even supplying model legislation, to address what it perceives as a health problem.
Flowmaster defends its products
"We have been in the business for over 20 years - and not by advocating that people break the law," said a Flowmaster spokesman who refused to identify himself to CNSNews.com . "That's why we make off-road products and products for street and emission vehicles as well."
According to the Flowmaster spokesman, the company designs exhaust systems for "race cars" based on the good-faith assumption that they will be installed on track-based race cars - not open-road passenger vehicles.
However, he said, "People, when they buy their cars and trucks, are free to do whatever they want, to a point. They go beyond that, oftentimes, and get in trouble."
Mostly pickup trucks, and mostly Chevys. They are louder than 747s and they drive aggressively, which is to say the commit a continuous series of moving violations and endanger the commonwealth.
[ ] is not 6 inches.
Speaking from experience with my Pontiac Formula, Flowmaster makes an awesome product. In fact, many Ricers locally to me would agree: they get to hear the rumble of my 350 TPI V8 as the red blur on their left passes by.
It is so long as everybody minds their own business and avoids annoying their neighbors.
At least you're even-handed. Your half-baked psychoanalysis of women is just as offensive as the one concerning men.
If you are using your car for something other than this, then yes, my answer is that someone is trying to compensate for something.
Less money to the mid-east is def. a good thing. Take it easy, HR2. Honk when you see me on the road : )
I actually did this (confronted the person & not hurt the car) about this time last year. The neighbors in question actually threatened to kill me if I complained again. They are no longer my neighbors, I didn't take kindly to that.. And I wouldn't do this in the middle of the night. I would also, as a result of past experience, use the police this time. These type of (noisy and intrusive) people have already demonstrated what they are like.
BTW, I'm 220 lbs. and 6'4" and one mean SOB if assaulted. Not many people would do much other than turn around quickly and leave if they were set out to to whip my @ss and then found out who I was. As for the few that might not?
Well ... I suppose that I should be out of jail before they were out of the hospital.
Well let's see shall we? I just rebuilt my engine in my car. Instead of buying a new car, I used what I already had saving myself about $29,000. I know this is going to come as a complete and utter shock to you but new parts do take some time to break in. After that break in period, there are going to be some things that do need to be taken care of. Springs, rocker arm adjustments, etc. Yes I could leave them as is when I put the engine together in the first place but it will affect my performance and in the long run can affect the life of the engine
This car was built for street/strip, to be used for both applications. As I said, I got out of cars years ago, but my wife still loves it and I did this for her, per her request. I know this will probably confuse your suburbanite minivan mind but not all women have locked themselves into the mindset of 'cars are evil'
If you are using your car for something other than this, then yes, my answer is that someone is trying to compensate for something.
Appreciate that. Good lockstep you've got there. Agree with the masses or you're wrong? Down with individualism, drive a minivan or SUV? Do it for the children? Well you've apprently got us all locked into a little box like a good liberal (that is one of their trademarks you know, stereotyping). I think a 5 billion dollar a year business and the fastest growing sport in this nation dispels your myth it's all 'compensating'. And would my Southern manners allow me, I'd tell you exactly what I think. But I won't. Good day
Anything that disrupts the peace of my home while I'm inside it. Most noise ordinances have decibel specifications which are generally more stringent than my standards are.
In fact, I thought it was illegel for a street legal vehicle to be on the road without one.
They (mufflers) are required here. Cats are required for emissions here as well, it is illegal to remove them. I believe that cats ( but not mufflers) are required under federal law for any street use anywhere, but some areas don't have local enforcement regualations about this.
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