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  2. Car alarm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Car_alarm

    A car alarm is an electronic device installed in a vehicle in an attempt to discourage theft of the vehicle itself, its contents, or both. Car alarms work by emitting high-volume sound (often a vehicle-mounted siren, klaxon , pre-recorded verbal warning, the vehicle's own horn, or a combination of these) when the conditions necessary for ...

  3. Back-up beeper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back-up_beeper

    A white-noise back-up beeper provides a less disruptive alert than the original pure-tone alert. A back-up beeper, also known as back-up alarm or vehicle motion alarm, is a device intended to warn passers-by of a vehicle moving in reverse. Some models produce pure tone beeps at about 1000 Hz and 97-112 decibels. [1]

  4. Vehicle horn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicle_horn

    A horn is a sound-making device installed on motor vehicles, trains, boats, and other types of vehicles. The sound it makes usually resembles a “honk” (older vehicles) or a “beep” (modern vehicles). The driver uses the horn to warn others of the vehicle's presence or approach, or to call attention to some hazard.

  5. Driver monitoring system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Driver_Monitoring_System

    Which allowed hands free driving at highway speeds on specially mapped highways. In order to ensure that the driver continued to pay attention to the road, they included Seeing Machines DMS, this was initially only available in the CT6. [6] In 2019, BMW introduced an Extended Traffic Jam Assistant System [7] in almost its entire range of car ...

  6. Roadway noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roadway_noise

    Roadway noise is the collective sound energy emanating from motor vehicles. It consists chiefly of road surface, tire, engine/transmission, aerodynamic, and braking elements. Noise of rolling tires driving on pavement is found to be the biggest contributor of highway noise and increases with higher vehicle speeds. [1] [2] [3]

  7. Electric vehicle warning sounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Electric_vehicle_warning_sounds

    The device makes hybrid electric vehicles sound more like conventional internal combustion engine cars when the vehicle goes into the silent electric mode (EV mode), but at a fraction of the sound level of most vehicles. At speeds higher than between 20 miles per hour (32 km/h) to 25 miles per hour (40 km/h) the sound system shuts off.

  8. Rumble strip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumble_strip

    The 'classic' one-car crash results when a vehicle slowly drifts to the right, hits dirt or rumble strips on the right shoulder of the road, and the driver becomes alert and overreacts, jerking the wheel left to bring the vehicle back onto the road. This motion causes the left front tire to strike the raised edge of the pavement at a sharp ...

  9. Anti-hijack system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-hijack_system

    A transponder system is a system which is always armed until a device, usually a small RFID transponder, enters the vehicle's transmitter radius. Since the device is carried by the driver, usually in their wallet or pocket, if the driver leaves the immediate vicinity of the vehicle, so will the transponder, causing the system to assume the vehicle has been hijacked and disable it.