Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 141, Minimum Sound Requirements for Hybrid and Electric Vehicles, 8182-8198 [2018-03721]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 38 / Monday, February 26, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary, Office of the Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–03865 Filed 2–23–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA–2018–0018]
RIN 2127–AL84
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard
No. 141, Minimum Sound
Requirements for Hybrid and Electric
Vehicles
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule; response to petitions
for reconsideration.
AGENCY:
This document responds to
petitions for reconsideration regarding
NHTSA’s December 2016 final rule
which established new Federal motor
vehicle safety standard (FMVSS) No.
141, ‘‘Minimum sound for hybrid and
electric vehicles.’’ The agency received
submissions from three petitioners
requesting six discrete changes to the
final rule, and also received technical
questions from the petitioners. After
consideration of the petitions and all
supporting information, NHTSA has
decided to grant the petitions for four of
the discrete changes, deny one, and
request comment in a separate
document for the sixth proposed
change.
SUMMARY:
Effective April 27, 2018.
Compliance dates: Compliance with
FMVSS No. 141 and related regulations,
as amended in this rule, is required for
all hybrid and electric vehicles to which
these regulations are applicable
beginning on September 1, 2020. The
initial compliance date for newly
manufactured vehicles under the 50percent phase-in as specified in FMVSS
No. 141 is delayed by one year to
September 1, 2019.
Petitions for reconsideration of this
final action must be received not later
than April 12, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Correspondence related to
this rule including petitions for
reconsideration and comments should
refer to the docket number in the
heading of this document and be
submitted to: Administrator, National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200
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DATES:
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New Jersey Avenue SE, West Building,
Washington, DC 20590.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: You
may contact Mr. Thomas Healy in
NHTSA’s Office of the Chief Counsel
regarding legal issues at (202) 366–2992
or FAX: 202–366–3820. For non-legal
issues, you may contact Mr. Michael
Pyne, NHTSA Office of Crash
Avoidance Standards, at (202) 366–4171
or FAX: 202–493–2990.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Of the six
requested changes contained in the
petitions, NHTSA is granting the
petition request to postpone the
compliance phase-in schedule by one
year. NHTSA also is granting two
petition requests relating to the
‘‘Sameness’’ requirements in the final
rule to further allow variations in alert
sound across different vehicle types,
and to reduce the number of compliance
criteria to meet the sameness standards.
In addition, NHTSA is granting a
petition request to modify the regulatory
language to permit the alteration of the
alert sound as originally equipped on a
vehicle for repairs and recall remedies.
NHTSA has decided to deny one
petition request to change the crossover
speed, which is the speed above which
the pedestrian alert sound is allowed to
turn off, from 30 kilometers per hour
(km/h) to 20 km/h. The agency has
determined that the available
information on lowering the crossover
speed does not warrant making that
change.
Furthermore, regarding a petition
request to allow vehicles to be
manufactured with a suite of driverselectable pedestrian alert sounds, the
agency is neither granting nor denying
that request in this document. Instead,
NHTSA intends to issue a separate
document at a later date to seek
comment on the issue of driverselectable sounds.
Additionally, this document
addresses a few requests for technical
changes and provides a few
clarifications of final rule technical
requirements raised in the petitions.
Lastly, this document responds to a
comment on the final rule about the
availability of industry technical
standards incorporated by reference in
the final rule.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
B. Final Rule
III. Petitions for Reconsideration Received by
NHTSA
A. Alliance/Global Petition for
Reconsideration and Letters of Support
B. Honda Petition for Reconsideration
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C. Nissan Petition for Reconsideration
D. Other Issues
IV. Agency Response and Decision
A. Phase-In Schedule, Compliance Dates,
and Lead Time
B. Sameness Requirement for Same Make,
Model, Model Year Vehicles
C. Criteria for Sameness of Production
Vehicles
D. Alteration of the OEM Alert Sound
E. Crossover Speed
F. Technical Clarifications in the Nissan
and Honda Petitions
G. Other Comments Relevant to the Final
Rule
V. Response to Petitions for Reconsideration
VI. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
I. Executive Summary
Pursuant to the Pedestrian Safety
Enhancement Act of 2010 (PSEA),1
NHTSA issued a final rule on December
14, 2016, to create a new FMVSS setting
minimum sound level requirements for
low-speed operation of hybrid and
electric light vehicles. The minimum
sound requirements provide a means for
blind and other pedestrians as well as
bicyclists and other road users to detect
the presence of these so-called quiet
vehicles and thereby reduce the risk that
these vehicles will be involved in lowspeed pedestrian crashes.
After the final rule was published,
NHTSA received timely petitions for
reconsideration 2 from three sources:
The Auto Alliance in conjunction with
Global Automakers (Alliance/Global);
American Honda Motor Company, Inc.
(Honda); and Nissan North America,
Inc. (Nissan). These petitions requested
several changes covering several aspects
of the final rule. Of the various issues
covered in these petitions, NHTSA
identified the following six discrete
requests for specific changes to
requirements in the final rule (listed
here in the order they appear in the
Alliance/Global, Honda, and Nissan
petitions):
1. To delay by one year both the
compliance phase-in schedule and the
date by which all vehicle production
must comply with the rule (section S9);
2. To limit the compliance criteria for
the Sameness requirement (section
S5.5.2) to only the digital sound file and
digital processing algorithm;
3. To modify the Sameness
requirement (S5.5.1) to allow alert
sounds to vary by trim level or model
series rather than just by make/model;
4. To modify section S8, which
prohibits altering the factory-equipped
alert sound, to allow recall remedies
1 Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act of 2010,
Public Law 111–373, 124 Stat. 4086 (2011).
2 The final rule allowed 45 days for submitting
petitions for reconsideration, resulting in a deadline
of January 30, 2017.
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and vehicle repairs when components of
the alert system are shared with other
vehicle systems;
5. To lower the crossover speed from
30 km/h (18.6 mph) to 20 km/h (12.4
mph);
6. To modify the Sameness
requirement so that a vehicle can be
equipped with a suite of up to five
driver-selectable alert sounds.
To facilitate the agency’s response to
the petitions, we are treating each of
these six issues as separate petition
requests and addressing them
individually in this document.
As fully discussed later in this rule,
the agency is granting several of these
petition requests, specifically the first
four issues listed above. We believe the
corresponding adjustments to the final
rule will clarify requirements, provide
more flexibility to vehicle
manufacturers, and remove potential
barriers to achieving compliance, while
having no foreseeable impact on the
safety benefits estimated in the
December 2016 final rule, as this rule
simply corrects an error in the original
final rule related to the phase-in
schedule and does not make changes
that affect the substance of the required
alert sound. The agency is denying the
fifth item above, relating to cross-over
speed, because no new data or analyses
have been presented that would justify
reversing the agency’s previous
conclusion on cross-over speed as
presented in the final rule preamble. As
for the last item, on driver-selectable
sounds, the agency has decided to
request public comment before deciding
how to respond to that request, and
NHTSA intends to issue a notice of
proposed rulemaking (NPRM) or other
Federal Register document on that
issue.
In this document, the agency also
responds to two issues raised by Nissan
relating to acoustic specifications in the
final rule. In addition, in response to
technical questions in the Honda
petition, we are providing several
clarifications of some requirements.
Lastly, in this document, NHTSA is
responding to two comments submitted
to the docket, one from Ford regarding
the legality of equipping certain
vehicles used for security purposes with
a means of turning off the required
pedestrian alert sound, and the other
from PublicResource.org regarding the
availability to the general public of
technical documents, including
industry standards from SAE, ISO, and
ANSI, incorporated by reference in the
final rule.
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Phase-In Schedule and Lead Time
The Alliance/Global and Honda
petitions along with a supplemental
submission from Alliance/Global and a
supporting comment from General
Motors Corporation discussed several
reasons related to vehicle design,
development, and manufacturing that
will make it very difficult if not
impossible for manufacturers to meet
the final rule’s compliance phase-in
schedule. The petitions and supporting
comments pointed out that there are
significant differences between the final
rule requirements and those in the
NPRM, as well as differences between
the final rule and a European regulation
on minimum vehicle sound, that will
force manufacturers to make changes to
prospective vehicle designs. Even if a
manufacturer had already incorporated
NPRM specifications into future vehicle
designs, more design lead time still is
needed to accommodate final rule
requirements. They also discussed the
specific language used in the PSEA
regarding phase-in of compliance and
indicated they believe the PSEA
requires NHTSA to provide an
additional year of lead time before
manufacturers must achieve full
compliance with the standard.
In consideration of these petitions and
supporting documents, the agency
recognizes that hybrid and electric
vehicle product cycles that are in
process for model years 2019 and 2020
may already be beyond the point where
they could fully meet the final rule’s
compliance phase-in schedule.
Thus, the agency has decided to grant
the petitions from Alliance/Global and
Honda with respect to extending the
lead-time for compliance with the final
rule. In this document, we are
specifying new compliance dates which
delay by one full year the date in the
final rule by which a fifty percent
phase-in must be achieved (revised to
September 1, 2019) and the deadline
date for full compliance of all vehicles
subject to the requirements of the safety
standard (revised to September 1, 2020).
We also are making conforming changes
to the dates in the Part 585 Phase-in
Reporting requirements as amended by
the December 14, 2016, final rule.
Changes to Sameness Requirements
The automakers that petitioned
NHTSA stated that vehicles of the same
model can have significant differences
that might affect their sound output. For
example, Honda pointed out that a twodoor and four-door car can have the
same make/model designation. Vehicles
of the same model designation also
might have different powertrains and
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bodywork such as grille design and
body cladding, which have the potential
to influence both the emitted sound and
the air-generated sound when the
vehicle is in motion. The agency
recognizes that, because of these
differences, it is not accurate in all
instances to consider all vehicles of the
same make/model to be the same for the
purposes of the FMVSS No. 141
requirement.
Where the PSEA required ‘‘the same
sound or set of sounds for all vehicles
of the same make and model,’’ it was
left up to NHTSA to interpret how
‘‘model’’ should be defined for the
purpose of regulating similarity of the
pedestrian alert sound. The agency
therefore has decided to grant the
Alliance/Global and Honda petitions
with respect to this part of the
‘‘Sameness’’ requirement. We are
amending the final rule so that alert
sounds can vary across different vehicle
trim levels in addition to varying by
make, model, and model year as
provided in the final rule.
We note that the term ‘‘trim level’’
was suggested in the Alliance/Global
petition as the criterion that should be
used to distinguish vehicles for the
purpose of the FMVSS No. 141
Sameness requirements. Honda
meanwhile suggested using the term
‘‘series.’’ ‘‘Trim level’’ is not a term that
is defined in NHTSA regulations, while
the term ‘‘series’’ is defined in Part
565.12. However, according to another
definition in Part 565.12, specifically
the definition of ‘‘model,’’ a series is not
considered a subset of a model, as it
would appear Honda assumed it is.
Therefore, we believe that the term
‘‘series’’ is not appropriate to use in this
instance. We thus are modifying the
regulatory text to account for different
trim levels, but not ‘‘series.’’ We believe
amending the requirement in this way is
the best approach for identifying groups
of vehicles that are required to have the
same pedestrian alert sound. This also
will provide the added flexibility in the
Sameness requirement that
manufacturers are seeking, and it is
responsive to both the Alliance/Global
and Honda requests on this issue.
The second change we are making to
the Sameness requirements is to limit
the criteria listed in paragraph S5.1.2 for
verifying compliance. As requested by
Alliance/Global, we are simplifying the
listed criteria so that the digital sound
file and the sound processing algorithms
will be the only specific criteria that are
required to be the same from one
specimen test vehicle to another. The
automakers stated that other Sameness
criteria listed in the final rule, such as
component part numbers, are hardware-
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based criteria that should be excluded.
One reason is that the PSEA statutory
language allowed for ‘‘reasonable
manufacturing tolerances.’’ They also
stated that requiring hardware-based
Sameness would unnecessarily impede
competitive sourcing of components, a
practice by which automakers source
components from different suppliers
such that the components may have
dissimilar part numbers even though
they are built to the same OEM
specification and have the same
performance. Alliance/Global also cited
a legal precedent under which NHTSA
regulations generally must avoid being
design-restrictive except when there is a
valid safety justification.
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Modify Requirement for Alteration of
OEM Alert Sound
NHTSA has decided to grant
Alliance/Global’s request to amend the
language in paragraph S8 of the final
rule prohibiting the alteration of the
alert sound originally equipped on a
vehicle at the time of production.
Alliance/Global and Honda state that
this prohibition is unnecessarily
restrictive and does not allow for
‘‘reasonable manufacturing tolerance’’
as required by the PSEA. Furthermore,
they are concerned the final rule could
prohibit vehicle repairs and recall
remedies when hardware components
such as an electronic control unit or
body control module, which may by
design be shared between the alert
system and other vehicle systems, needs
to be replaced.
Although the agency is uncertain that
the existing final rule language which
prohibits altering the alert sound
originally equipped on a production
vehicle would impede any vehicle
repairs or remedies, we are adopting
this change to clarify the existing
language because it was not the agency’s
intention to hinder vehicle repairs or
recall remedies.
Reduce the Crossover Speed to
20 km/h
NHTSA is denying Nissan’s request to
reduce the crossover speed from 30 km/
h (18.6 mph) to 20 km/h (12.4 mph).
Nissan’s petition stated that NHTSA had
not specifically addressed their NPRM
comment regarding this issue. The
Nissan petition did not provide new
information or data on crossover speed
that NHTSA had not considered when
developing the final rule.
NHTSA notes that the final rule did
specifically address a JASIC study and
test data which was the basis of the
Nissan NPRM comment. More
importantly, NHTSA included a new
analysis in the final rule to address
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comments, including Nissan’s, about the
need to evaluate crossover speed using
detectability criteria rather than by other
methods. The new analysis in the final
rule used the Volpe detection model
which previously had been used to
develop the final rule’s acoustic
specifications. In this new analysis, data
from a selection of internal combustion
engine (ICE) vehicles in coast down
mode (engine off to simulate an EV or
HV in electric mode) was analyzed
using the Volpe model to determine
whether the vehicle noise at each test
speed (10, 20, and 30 km/h) had reached
a detectable level. NHTSA’s conclusion
about this new detection-based analysis
was that it did not support lowering the
crossover speed to 20 km/h. Since this
analysis was based on detection rather
than comparisons to other vehicles, we
believe it was responsive to the Nissan
NPRM comments on crossover speed.
Given that fact and the absence of new
data in Nissan’s petition, NHTSA has no
basis to revise our previous conclusion
about crossover speed.
The agency also notes that the final
rule contained other concessions that
indirectly address manufacturer
concerns about crossover speed. In the
final rule, in addition to reducing the
required number of bands from the
proposed number of eight bands, all
required minimum sound levels for
each operating speed were reduced by 4
dB to offset potential measurement
variation. By virtue of this across-theboard reduction, the required sound
levels at 30 km/h in the final rule are
close to the proposed levels for 20 km/
h in the NPRM for this rulemaking.
Lastly, we note that safety
organizations, particularly the National
Federation of the Blind, have expressed
their support of the 30 km/h crossover
speed and have not agreed that lowering
it to 20 km/h is acceptable.
The agency’s position continues to be
that lowering the crossover speed from
the 30 km/h level, contained in both the
NPRM and final rule, is not warranted
by the available information, and we are
denying the Nissan petition request on
this issue.
Allow Driver-Selectable Alert Sounds
NHTSA has decided to seek comment
on Alliance/Global’s request to allow
hybrid and electric vehicles to be
equipped with multiple, driverselectable alert sounds before granting
or denying this request. Amending the
requirements to allow multiple sounds
per vehicle would be a substantial
change to the final rule. Because
NHTSA did not solicit or receive
comment on the number of driverselectable sounds that should be
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allowed if NHTSA were to allow them,
we believe it is appropriate to seek
public comment before determining
whether to grant this request. Therefore,
in accordance with normal rulemaking
administrative procedures, NHTSA
tentatively plans to issue a separate
document, which would provide an
opportunity for public comment on this
particular issue.
Technical Issues and Clarifications in
the Honda and Nissan Petitions
In addition to requesting specific
changes to requirements in the final
rule, the petitions raised technical
issues relating to the acoustic
specifications and test procedures and
also asked for clarification on specific
language in the final rule. These
technical issues are summarized here
and fully addressed later in this
document.
Technical issues raised in Nissan’s
petition included two items: First was a
request to allow the use of adjacent
instead of only non-adjacent one-third
octave bands for compliance; and
second was a request to set the
minimum band sum requirements for
the 2-band compliance option to be
equal to the corresponding overall SPLs
of the 4-band compliance option. We
note that, while Nissan phrased these
two issues as petition requests, we are
treating them as technical clarifications
because the final rule preamble
included substantial explanation of the
agency’s rationale for specifying nonadjacent bands for compliance as well
as the agency’s methodology for
selecting the band sum levels for the 2band compliance option, and we do not
believe that the information presented
in Nissan’s petition invalidates the
agency’s previous analysis, as explained
later in this document. After giving
these two technical requests from
Nissan due consideration, the agency is
not making any changes to the acoustic
specifications in response to these
requests.
Honda’s petition requested the
following technical clarifications:
Whether a vehicle can switch between
2-band and 4-band compliance at the
different test speeds; which bands
should be selected for compliance when
the highest band levels above and below
1000 Hz are in adjacent rather than nonadjacent bands; and how to calculate the
average of overall SPL values (section
S7.1.4). Also, Honda requested that
indoor testing be an option available for
manufacturer certification in addition to
outdoor testing.
In reviewing the regulatory text of the
December 2016 final rule to address
Honda’s petition, NHTSA identified
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several inconsistencies and minor errors
in section S7 of the regulatory text.
Because the agency already was making
a number of text changes to S7 to
respond to Honda, NHTSA has taken
this opportunity to correct and clarify
the text as needed to resolve those
inconsistencies and errors.
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
Comment About Availability of
Documents Incorporated by Reference
A submission to the docket from
Publicresource.org was concerned with
the public availability of technical
documents that were incorporated by
reference into the final rule. The
documents in question are industry
technical standards including an SAE
recommended practice (in two
versions), an ISO standard (in three
versions), and an ANSI standard.
Publicresource.org stated that various
parties and members of the public that
may have some interest in the rule
would not have adequate access to these
reference documents. This might
include consumer protection groups,
small manufacturers, hobbyists, and
students. Publicresource.org did not
specify why they believe availability
would be limited or lacking, whether
that would be due to cost of the
documents or some other reason. The
agency’s position is that the subject
reference documents for FMVSS No.
141 are available in the same manner as
reference documents for any other
FMVSS. For this rulemaking, the agency
followed the same practice for handling
reference documents as it always
follows, as set forth in Section VI,
Regulatory Notices and Analyses, in the
final rule, as well as in the
corresponding section at the end of this
document.
II. Background
NHTSA’s involvement with the safety
of quiet hybrid and electric vehicles and
their impact on pedestrian safety goes
back at least a decade to when the
agency began monitoring efforts by
various outside groups on this issue. In
2008 the agency held a public meeting
on the safety of quiet vehicles and, the
following year, initiated a statistical
study of relevant pedestrian crashes and
began researching the acoustical aspects
of the safety problem.
In January 2011, the U.S. Congress
enacted legislation, the Pedestrian
Safety Enhancement Act of 2010
(PSEA), which directed NHTSA to
undertake rulemaking to create a new
safety standard to require hybrid and
electric vehicles to have a minimum
sound level in order to help pedestrians,
especially those with impaired eyesight,
to detect those vehicles.
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In accordance with the PSEA, NHTSA
issued an NPRM 3 on January 14, 2013,
and a final rule 4 on December 14, 2016,
establishing FMVSS No. 141,
‘‘Minimum Sound Requirements for
Hybrid and Electric Vehicles.’’
NHTSA’s conducted a statistical crash
data study, as cited in the final rule,5
which found that the pedestrian crash
rate of hybrid vehicles was 1.18 times
greater than that of conventional ICE
vehicles. The agency’s Final Regulatory
Impact Assessment is available in the
docket 6 with some proprietary
information redacted. Also, the benefits
of the final rule are summarized in
section V–A 7 of the final rule preamble,
and the costs are summarized in section
V–B.8
NHTSA also completed an
Environmental Assessment 9 of the
potential for increase in ambient noise
levels in urban and non-urban
environments in the U.S. which would
result from a federal regulation setting
minimum sound levels for hybrid and
electric vehicles. The Environmental
Assessment estimated that there will be
only minimal impact in one type of nonurban scenario, and the overall
environmental noise increase from the
safety standard for HVs and EVs was
found to be negligible.
A. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
Pursuant to the Pedestrian Safety
Enhancement Act, NHTSA issued a
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM) 10 in January 2013 to create a
new FMVSS setting minimum sound
level requirements for low-speed
operation of hybrid and electric light
vehicles.
The NPRM proposed a crossover
speed of 30 km/h (18.6 mph) because at
that speed, based on NHTSA tests that
used a ‘‘peer vehicle’’ comparison
methodology, tire noise, wind
resistance, and other noises from the
vehicle eliminated the need for added
alert sounds. In the agency’s tests, the
sound levels of a selection of electric
and hybrid vehicles were evaluated and
compared to the sound levels of
vehicles having the same or similar
make, model, and body type but
3 78
FR 2797.
FR 90416.
5 NHTSA Traffic Safety Facts—Research Note,
Wu, J., Feb. 2017, ‘‘Updated Analysis of Pedestrian
and Pedalcyclist Crashes with Hybrid Vehicles’’
available at https://crashstats.nhtsa.dot.gov/Api/
Public/ViewPublication/812371.
6 See docket NHTSA–2016–0125–0011 at
www.regulations.gov.
7 81 FR 90505.
8 81 FR 90507.
9 See docket NHTSA–2016–0125–0009 at
www.regulations.gov.
10 78 FR 2798.
4 81
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operating with internal combustion
engines (ICEs). For example, the sound
level of a hybrid Toyota Camry in
electric mode in a pass-by test at 20 km/
h was directly compared to the sound
level of a conventional gas-engine
Toyota Camry of the same model year at
the same pass-by speed of 20 km/h.
The NPRM specified an outdoor
compliance test procedure based on the
September 2011 version of SAE J2889–
1. The compliance procedure included
tests for stationary, reverse, and pass-by
measurements conducted at 10 km/h
(6.2 mph), 20 km/h (12.4 mph), and 30
km/h (18.6 mph). We explained in the
NPRM that NHTSA believed that
outdoor pass-by testing is preferable to
indoor testing in hemi-anechoic
chambers using chassis dynamometers
because outdoor testing is more
representative of the real-world
interactions between pedestrians and
vehicles. We also expressed concern
that specifications for indoor testing
were not fully developed and did not
have a known level of objectivity,
repeatability, and reproducibility for
testing minimum vehicle sound at low
speeds.
The NPRM proposed a Sameness
requirement in order to ensure that
hybrid and electric vehicles of the same
make and model emit the same sound,
as directed by the PSEA. The NPRM
proposed that vehicles of the same
make, model, and model year must emit
the same level of sound within 3 dB(A)
in each one-third octave band from 160
Hz to 5000 Hz.
B. Final Rule
As noted, the final rule was published
on December 14, 2016, and established
FMVSS No. 141 which applies to
electric and hybrid-electric passenger
cars, MPVs, light trucks, and buses with
a GVWR of 10,000 pounds or less and
to low speed vehicles (LSVs). The
standard applies to these vehicles if
they can be operated in an electric mode
in the test conditions covered by the
standard, without an any internal
combustion engine (ICE) operation. The
final rule requires hybrid and electric
vehicles to emit sound at minimum
levels while the vehicle is stationary
(although not when the vehicle is
parked, i.e., when the transmission is in
‘‘park’’), while in reverse, and while the
vehicle is in forward motion up to 30
km/h. It also adopted the agency’s
proposal to conduct compliance testing
outdoors.
In the final rule, the agency reduced
the number of one-third octave bands
for which vehicles must meet minimum
sound pressure level requirements. The
NPRM proposed that vehicles would
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have to emit sound meeting minimum
requirements in eight one-third octave
bands. In the final rule, hybrid and
electric vehicles will instead have to
meet a requirement based on sound
level in either two or four one-third
octave bands at the vehicle
manufacturer’s option, and a vehicle
may alternate between meeting the 2band and 4-band specifications
depending on test speed. Vehicles
complying with the 4-band option must
meet minimum sound pressure levels in
any four non-adjacent one-third octave
bands between 315 Hz and 5000 Hz,
including the one-third octave bands
between 630 Hz and 1600 Hz (these
bands were excluded in the NPRM).
Vehicles complying with the 2-band
option must meet minimum sound
pressure levels in two non-adjacent onethird octave bands between 315 Hz and
3150 Hz, with one band below 1000 Hz
and the other band at or above 1000 Hz.
The two bands used to meet the 2-band
option also must meet a minimum band
sum level.
Under the 4-band compliance option,
the minimum sound levels for each
band are slightly lower than the values
proposed in the NPRM, and the overall
sound pressure of sounds meeting the 4band option will be similar to those
meeting the proposed eight-band
requirements in the NPRM. Under the 2band compliance option, the minimum
sound requirements for each band are
lower than those of the proposed eightband requirements for the low and mid
frequency bands (315 Hz through 3,150
Hz; the 4,000 Hz and 5,000 Hz bands are
not included for the purpose of
determining compliance with the 2band requirement.) Neither the 4-band
compliance option nor the 2-band
compliance option include
requirements for tones or broadband
content that were contained in the
NPRM.
For both the 2-band and 4-band
compliance options, the final rule
expands the range of acceptable onethird octave bands to include those
between 630 Hz and 1600 Hz (these
bands were excluded in the NPRM). It
also reflects an across-the-board
reduction in the minimum levels of 4
dB(A) to account for measurement
variability which the agency’s
development of test procedures
indicated was needed.
Reducing the number and minimum
levels of required one-third octave
bands while expanding the number of
useable bands in the final rule provided
additional flexibility to manufacturers
for designing pedestrian alert systems
while preserving the goal of pedestrian
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alert sounds that are detectable in
various ambient environments.
Regarding Sameness, NHTSA revised
the criteria for determining that the
sound produced by two HVs or EVs of
the same make, model, and model year
is the same. The agency determined that
the NPRM requirement for the sound
produced by two specimen vehicles to
be within three dB(A) in every one-third
octave band between 315 Hz and 5000
Hz was technically not feasible. The
final rule instead requires that HVs and
EVs of the same make, model, and
model year emit the same sound by
specifying that those vehicles use the
same alert system hardware and
software, including specific items such
as the same digital sound file to produce
sound used to meet the minimum sound
requirements. The final rule listed
several other criteria including part
numbers of alert system components
that may be evaluated to verify
compliance with the Sameness
requirement.
The final rule made numerous
improvements to the proposed test
procedures in response to comments
that were received on the NPRM.
With regard to the phase-in schedule
for the safety standard, the NPRM
proposed a phase-in schedule for
manufacturers of HVs and EVs, with 30
percent of the HVs and EVs they
produce required to comply three years
before the date for full compliance
established in the PSEA, 60 percent
required to comply two years before the
full-compliance date, and 90 percent
required to comply one year before the
full-compliance date. To respond to
comments on that proposal, the final
rule simplified the phase-in schedule by
shortening it to include a single year of
phase-in, rather than three years. This
simplification provides somewhat more
lead-time and responds to vehicle
manufacturers’ comments that the
proposed phase-in was unnecessarily
complex.
Under the final rule, half of each
manufacturer’s HV and EV production
would have been required to comply
with the final rule by September 1,
2018, and 100 percent by September 1,
2019. The phase-in does not apply to
multi-stage and small volume
manufacturers; all of their HV and EV
production would have been required to
comply with the final rule by September
1, 2019.
III. Petitions for Reconsideration
Received by NHTSA
In response to the published final rule
on Minimum Sound Requirements for
Hybrid and Electric Vehicles, NHTSA
received timely petitions for
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reconsideration (submitted by the
January 30, 2017, deadline) from three
sources: The Auto Alliance in
conjunction with Global Automakers 11
(Alliance/Global); Nissan North
America, Inc.12 (Nissan); and American
Honda Motor Company, Inc.13 (Honda).
Alliance/Global 14 also submitted a
supplemental letter in support of their
petition. In addition, General Motors
Corp, Inc., submitted a letter providing
support on one of the issues raised by
Alliance/Global and Honda. (The GM
letter contained proprietary information,
so it has not been released to the
docket.)
These petitions requested several
changes covering several aspects of the
final rule. NHTSA identified the
following six discrete requests for
changes to specific requirements (listed
here in the approximate order they
appear in the Alliance/Global, Honda,
and Nissan petitions):
1. To delay by one year both the
compliance phase-in date and the date
by which all vehicle production must
comply with the rule (section S9);
2. To consolidate the compliance
criteria for the Sameness requirement
(section S5.5.2) to include only the
digital sound file and digital processing
algorithm;
3. To modify the Sameness
requirement (S5.5.1) to allow alert
sounds to vary by trim level or model
series rather than just by make/model;
4. To modify section S8, which
prohibits altering the factory-equipped
alert sound, so as not to impede vehicle
repairs when components of the alert
system are shared with other vehicle
systems;
5. To lower the crossover speed from
30 km/h (18.6 mph) to 20 km/h (12.4
mph);
6. To modify the Sameness
requirement so that a vehicle can be
equipped with a suite of up to five
driver-selectable alert sounds.
In addition to these specific requests
for amendments to the final rule, some
of the petitions included requests for
technical clarifications. Nissan’s
submission included two such requests,
one concerning the minimum sound
levels for 2-band and 4-band
specifications, and the other regarding
allowing adjacent bands for compliance.
Similarly, Honda’s submission pointed
out a few technical clarifications they
believe are needed, involving the
intended use of 2-band and 4-band
compliance options, the correct method
11 See
docket NHTSA–2016–0125–0012.
docket NHTSA–2016–0125–0013.
13 See docket NHTSA–2016–0125–0014.
14 See docket NHTSA–2016–0125–0016.
12 See
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of data selection and calculation for
certain steps in the sound evaluation
process, and the option of using indoor
testing.
Lastly, NHTSA received one
additional docket comment, from
PublicResourse.org,15 that the agency
has decided to address in this
document. This comment was in regard
to the availability to the public of
technical reference documents,
specifically several industry standards
from SAE, ISO, and ANSI, that were
incorporated by reference in the final
rule. This docket submission in
discussed in more detail below.
A. Alliance/Global Petition for
Reconsideration and Letters of Support
The Alliance/Global petition
addressed requirements for: Compliance
phase-in schedule; equipping HVs and
EVs with driver-selectable sounds;
applying Sameness to each ‘‘trim level’’
rather than each model; limiting the
Sameness compliance criteria to the
digital sound file and digital algorithm;
and removing any prohibition on
altering vehicle components that may be
shared between the alert system and
other vehicle systems.
Regarding the phase-in schedule, in
addition to discussing design and
manufacturing considerations that
would make the final rule schedule
unfeasible, Alliance/Global’s petition
pointed out that NHTSA’s interpretation
of the PSEA language regarding
compliance dates appeared to have
changed between the NPRM and the
final rule. The petition argued that the
earlier interpretation was the correct
one and that, under that interpretation,
the agency is required to provide an
additional year of lead-time before full
compliance is required.
Alliance/Global submitted a
supplementary letter which provided
further detail on the phase-in schedule
and the issue of driver-selectable
sounds. On the phase-in, the
supplemental submission discussed
specific final rule requirements that had
changed since the NPRM. It also noted
several areas where the final rule is
different from the UN Regulation No.
138. In their supplementary submission,
Alliance/Global also indicated that, if a
set of driver-selectable sounds was
permitted, manufacturers would limit
the number to no more than five
different sounds per make, model,
model year, and trim level of vehicle.
A letter in support of the Alliance/
Global petition submitted by GM
(submitted under a request for
confidentiality) addressed the issue of
15 See
docket NHTSA–2016–0125–0004.
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phase-in schedule. This letter stated,
‘‘While GM supports NHTSA’s effort to
create minimum sound requirements for
electric and hybrid vehicles, the final
rule contains a number of additional
technical challenges that will require
substantial redesigns to GM’s existing
systems.’’ GM’s letter also stated, ‘‘The
twenty-month phase-in provided by the
final rule is far less than the normal
timing required to develop, validate,
and certify new systems.’’ GM cited the
final rule’s volume shift requirement,
different frequency range, and several
design changes that will be needed in
the sound generating systems that GM
already has been installing in its electric
and hybrid production vehicles. The
GM letter cited specific hardware
changes, upgrades, and replacements
that their current alert systems need to
be compliant with FMVSS No. 141.
Most recently, on August 4, 2017, the
Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers
(the Alliance), the Association of Global
Automakers (Global) and the National
Federation of the Blind (NFB) wrote the
Deputy Secretary of the Department of
Transportation requesting that the
December 2016 final rule be permitted
to come into effect on September 5,
2017. The letter also requested that by
September 5, 2017, NHTSA amend the
compliance date of the December 2016
final rule to delay the phase-in and full
compliance dates by one year and by
November 6, 2017, respond to the
remaining technical issues in the
pending petitions for reconsideration.
B. Honda Petition for Reconsideration
Honda’s petition included two
specific petition requests, one regarding
the phase-in schedule, and the other
regarding allowance for alert sounds to
vary from vehicle to vehicle according
to model ‘‘series’’ as well as make,
model, and model year. The remainder
of Honda’s submission was concerned
with technical clarifications and
comments on the rule. Honda asked if
it is acceptable under the 2-band and 4band compliance specifications for a
vehicle to switch back and forth
between the two specifications at the
different speed conditions of the test
procedure. Honda also asked NHTSA to
clarify section S7.1.6(e)(i) of the test
procedure, noting that there could be a
conflict when choosing the two highest
band levels while also choosing only
non-adjacent bands for the compliance
evaluation. In addition, Honda asked
NHTSA to clarify the calculation
method for averaging overall SPLs in
section 7.1.4(c) of the test procedure.
Lastly, Honda stated that indoor
testing should be optional for FMVSS
No. 141 compliance evaluations and is
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preferable because of the better stability
and the efficiency of indoor sound
measurements, and also because, from a
harmonization standpoint, that would
better align the safety standard with UN
Regulation No. 138 which permits
indoor measurements.
C. Nissan Petition for Reconsideration
Nissan submitted a cover letter and
technical slides in which they requested
that NHTSA reconsider its decision in
the final rule on the crossover speed,
which the agency set at 30 km/h (18.6
mph). Nissan stated that they believe
the crossover speed should be set at 20
km/h, and cited a previous comment 16
that Nissan had submitted to the docket
in May 2014 in response to the agency’s
NPRM and which summarized a JASIC
study related to crossover speed. Nissan
stated that NHTSA did not address this
comment in the final rule.
Nissan’s petition also raised two
technical issues. The first was a request
that NHTSA allow the use of adjacent
instead of only non-adjacent one-third
octave bands for compliance. The
second issue was a request to set the
minimum band sum requirements for
the 2-band compliance option to be
equal to the minimum overall SPLs for
the 4-band compliance option. Although
these two issues raised by Nissan ask
the agency to reconsider specific
requirements of the final rule and
request specific changes, we believe
these two issues were addressed in the
discussion of NHTSA’s acoustic
research in the final rule preamble.
Thus, we have decided it is appropriate
to treat these issues as technical
clarifications.
D. Other Issues
A comment from Publicresource.org
expressed concern with public
availability of technical documents that
were incorporated by reference into the
final rule. The documents in question
are industry technical standards
including an SAE recommended
practice (in two versions), an ISO
standard (in three versions), and an
ANSI standard. Publicresource.org
stated that various parties such as
consumer protection groups, small
manufacturers, hobbyists, and students
would not have adequate access to these
reference documents. Publicresource.org
did not specify why that would be the
case, i.e., whether it is due to the cost
of the documents when purchased from
their respective technical organizations,
or some other reason.
16 See
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IV. Agency Response and Decision
As outlined in the previous section of
this document, the petitions requested a
number of changes covering several
aspects of the final rule. NHTSA
identified six discrete requests for
changes to specific requirements. As
stated previously, to facilitate
responding to the petitions, the agency
is treating each of the six issues as
separate requests and addressing each
request individually below.
After considering all information
provided by petitioners, NHTSA is
granting four of the requested actions,
denying one request (on crossover
speed), and for the last item (on driverselectable sounds), the agency has
decided that it will be necessary to
request public comment before deciding
how to respond to that request, and
NHTSA intends to issue a notice of
proposed rulemaking (NPRM) or other
Federal Register document on that
issue.
In regard to the four petition requests
that the agency is granting, we are
amending the final rule to implement
the following changes:
• Amend Section S9, Phase-In
Schedule, to add exactly one year to
each of the dates listed in subsections
S9.1, S9.1(a), S9.1(b), and S9.2.
• Amend Section S5.5, Sameness
requirement, subsection S5.5.1, to allow
alert sounds to vary across different trim
levels, and also amend Section S4,
Definitions, to add a new definition for
‘‘trim level.’’
• Amend Section S5.5, Sameness
requirement, subsection S5.5.2, to limit
the criteria listed in the final rule to be
used for verifying compliance with the
Sameness requirement so that the digital
sound file and the sound processing
algorithm are the only criteria that are
required to be the same. Other criteria,
particularly part numbers of hardware
components, would not be listed in the
regulatory text.
• Amend Section S8, Prohibition on
altering the sound of a vehicle subject
to this standard, to clarify that the rule
does not prohibit vehicle repairs
unrelated to the alert system in the case
of replacement of hardware components
shared between the alert system and
other vehicle systems, i.e., a body
control module.
These amendments to the final rule
and the agency’s reasons for adopting
them are further discussed below. In
general, we believe these changes to the
final rule are worthwhile refinements
that will clarify the requirements,
provide more flexibility to vehicle
manufacturers, and remove potential
barriers to achieving compliance, while
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having no foreseeable impact on the
safety benefits estimated in the
December 2016 final rule, as this rule
simply corrects an error in the original
final rule related to the phase-in
schedule and does not make changes
that affect the substance of the required
alert sound.
Our decision to deny one request, as
well as the agency’s intent to seek
comment on one issue, also are
discussed in detail below. In addition,
we address some technical issues raised
and other comments relating to the final
rule.
A. Phase-In Schedule, Compliance
Dates, and Lead Time
The agency has decided to grant the
petitions from Alliance/Global and
Honda with respect to extending the
lead-time for compliance by extending
the phase-in date and the full
compliance date by one year. NHTSA is
also addressing supplemental
submissions from Alliance/Global and
General Motors Corporation (GM) that
provided information on the lead time
issue.
After further consideration, we agree
with the petitioners that the
interpretation of the PSEA phase-in
requirements provided by the agency in
the NPRM is the correct interpretation
and that delaying the full compliance
date until September 1, 2020 is required
by that interpretation. The PSEA states
that, ‘‘The motor vehicle safety standard
. . . shall establish a phase-in period for
compliance, as determined by the
Secretary, and shall require full
compliance . . . on or after September
1 of the calendar year that begins 3 years
after the date on which the final rule is
issued.’’ In the NPRM, the agency had
stated that the appropriate timeframe
should be the calendar year beginning
36 months after the rule was issued,
such that, if a rule were issued anytime
in 2016, the 36-month period after the
date of publication of the final rule
would end sometime in 2019. Thus, the
first calendar year that would begin after
that date in 2019 would be calendar
year 2020, meaning that full compliance
should be by September 1, 2020. The
agency believes that its interpretation
from the NPRM continues to be the
correct interpretation of the PSEA. In
fact, upon review, the agency did not
actually change this interpretation in
the Final Rule, as the phase-in schedule
and economic analysis were based on
the assumption that the rule would be
published in 2015, rather than 2016,
which is what actually occurred. The
agency now corrects this error.
Further, NHTSA agrees that, because
of vehicle product cycles, it would be
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difficult for manufacturers to make the
design modifications necessary for
vehicles subject to FMVSS No. 141 to
meet the current final rule phase-in
schedule and full compliance date,
especially in light of the significant
changes from the NPRM and the
uncertainty surrounding the issues
raised in the petitions for
reconsideration.
In the Final Rule, the agency
estimated that the economic impact of
the rule for MY 2020 vehicles was $42M
to $41.5M in costs and $320M to
$247.5M in benefits at the 3 percent and
7 percent discount rates. However, in
light of the issues raised in the petitions
and the more recent letter from the
Alliance, Global, and NFB, the agency
believes that the analysis in the final
rule may likely have understated the
initial costs to comply with the rule.
More specifically, the analysis was
based on a less aggressive phase-in
schedule and as such, does not support
a 100 percent compliance date of
September 1, 2019. In fact, comments
received indicate that the more
accelerated phase-in schedule than what
the agency had intended is not
technically possible, which calls in to
question the relationship between
benefits and costs presented in the Final
Rule. By delaying the compliance date
by one year, the economic impacts of
the rule will more closely mirror those
presented in support of the Final Rule.
In this document, we are specifying
new compliance dates which delay by
one full year both corresponding dates
in the final rule, i.e., the date by which
a fifty percent phase-in must be
achieved and also the deadline date for
full compliance of all vehicles subject to
the requirements of the safety standard.
Under the amended one-year phase-in,
half of vehicles produced in model year
2020 must be compliant, as follows:
• Fifty percent of each manufacturer’s
total production of hybrid and electric
vehicles, subject to the applicability of
FMVSS No. 141 and produced on and
after September 1, 2019, and before
September 1, 2020, shall comply with
the safety standard;
OR, at the manufacturer’s option: 50
percent of each manufacturer’s average
annual production of hybrid and
electric vehicles subject to the
applicability of FMVSS No. 141 and
produced on and after September 1,
2016, and before September 1, 2019,
shall comply with the safety standard.
Immediately following the one-year
phase-in, starting with model year 2021,
all hybrid and electric vehicles are
required to comply, as follows:
• 100 percent of each manufacturer’s
production of hybrid and electric
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vehicles subject to the applicability of
FMVSS No. 141 and produced on and
after September 1, 2020, shall comply
with the safety standard.
In making these changes to the
compliance schedule, we believe this
will afford manufacturers the additional
flexibility and lead time needed to
accommodate customary vehicle design
cycles, thus addressing the schedule
concerns expressed in their petitions.
As a consequence of the revised
phase-in schedule, it is necessary to
make conforming adjustments to the
Part 585 reporting requirements in order
to align them with the new phase-in
period. The conforming changes to Part
585 are detailed below.
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Phase-In Reporting
When a new safety regulation is
phased in over a period of time, NHTSA
requires manufacturers to submit
production data so the agency can track
and verify adherence to the phase-in
schedule. Part 585 of Title 49 of the CFR
contains the requirements for Phase-in
Reporting for various FMVSS. To
implement the one-year, 50-percent
phase-in for FMVSS No. 141, the
December 2016 final rule included
amendments to Part 585, appending
new Subpart N, to provide for tracking
of production data so that the agency
can verify that the requisite minimum
percentage of vehicles are in compliance
during the phase-in.
As a result of the amended phase-in
schedule contained in this document,
we are making corresponding
adjustments to the phase-in reporting
dates of Part 585, Subpart N, as
amended in the December 14, 2016,
final rule. This entails adding one year
to the due dates in the following
paragraphs of Part 585, Subpart N:
§ 585.130 ‘Applicability’; § 585.132
‘Response to Inquiries’; § 585.133
‘Reporting Requirements’; and § 585.130
‘Records.’ These revisions appear in the
regulatory text at the end of this
document.
B. Sameness Requirement for Same
Make, Model, Model Year Vehicles
The petitions from Alliance/Global
and Honda requested that NHTSA
amend section S5.5.1 of the Sameness
requirement in the final rule regulatory
text. That section required all vehicles
of the same make, model, and model
year to use the same pedestrian alert
sound system and be designed to have
the same sound. This requirement
originated from the PSEA which
stipulated that the safety standard ‘‘shall
require manufacturers to provide,
within reasonable manufacturing
tolerances, the same sound or set of
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sounds for all vehicles of the same make
and model. . . .’’
The automakers stated that vehicles of
the same model can have significant
differences unrelated to the alert sound
system that might affect their sound
output. For example, Honda pointed out
that a two-door and four-door car can
have the same model designation.
Vehicles of the same model designation
also might have different powertrains
and bodywork such as grille design and
body cladding, which have the potential
to influence both emitted sound and the
air-generated sound when the vehicle is
in motion.
Alliance/Global requested that
NHTSA add the term ‘‘trim level’’ to
‘‘make, model, and model year’’ in
S5.5.1 so that vehicles of the same
make/model would be required to have
the same sound only if the vehicles also
have the same trim level designation.
This would give manufacturers
flexibility to allow the alert sound to
vary among vehicles that, while having
the same make/model designation, may
nevertheless be physically different in
significant ways. Honda made a similar
request but, instead of the term ‘‘trim
level,’’ Honda requested using the term
‘‘series.’’
The agency recognizes that, because
of the possibility of physically
significant differences between vehicles
within a model line, it is not practical
to consider all vehicles of the same
make/model to be the same for the
purposes of the pedestrian alert sound.
The agency therefore has decided to
grant the Alliance/Global and Honda
petitions with respect to this aspect of
the ‘‘Sameness’’ requirement. We are
amending the final rule so that alert
sounds can vary across different vehicle
trim levels and also by vehicle body
type, in addition to varying by make,
model, and model year as provided in
the final rule.
For the revised requirement, ‘‘body
type’’ is added and is used as defined
in 49 CFR 565.12(b) which states, ‘‘Body
type means the general configuration or
shape of a vehicle distinguished by such
characteristics as the number of doors or
windows, cargo-carrying features and
the roofline (e.g., sedan, fastback,
hatchback).’’
The request on this issue in Alliance/
Global petition used the term ‘‘trim
level’’ as the designation criterion that
would distinguish vehicles for the
purpose of Sameness requirements in
FMVSS No. 141, while Honda suggested
using the term ‘‘series.’’ We note that
‘‘trim level’’ is not a term that is defined
anywhere in NHTSA regulations, while
the term ‘‘series’’ is defined in Part
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8189
565.12.17 However, it also should be
noted that, per the definition of
‘‘model’’ also included in Part 565.12, a
‘‘series’’ would not be considered a
subset of a model. On the contrary, a
‘‘model’’ as defined in Part 565.12 is a
subset of a ‘‘series.’’ Therefore, the
agency believes based on the existing
definitions that ‘‘series’’ does not reflect
a subdivision of a model line, as Honda
seems to have intended. On the other
hand, we believe the term ‘‘trim level’’
is widely understood to denote a subset
of a model, which is what the
petitioners seek to achieve according to
the information they provided on this
issue. Therefore, we are modifying the
regulatory text to account for different
trim level designations, without
reference to or use of the term ‘‘series.’’
For this revised requirement, ‘‘trim
level’’ is defined to mean a subset of
vehicles within the same model
designation and with the same body
type which are alike in their general
level of standard equipment, such as a
‘‘base’’ trim level of a vehicle model.
Other trim levels within a model might
include a ‘‘sport’’ version or ‘‘luxury’’
version. These depend on the trim
designations that are used by different
manufacturers. Generally, different trim
levels comprise no more than a few
different versions of a given model. For
the purposes of FMVSS No. 141, minor
differences including different wheel
rim styles or merely being equipped
with a sunroof should not be considered
to constitute different trim levels. Trim
levels should be considered to be
different only if they represent vehicle
differences that are likely to alter
vehicle-emitted sound. We are
including a definition of ‘‘trim level’’ in
section S4 of the regulatory text to
reflect this.
We believe relaxing the final rule in
this manner will adequately distinguish
between groups of vehicles that, based
on their physical similarity, can
reasonably be required to have the same
pedestrian alert sound. This change will
provide the added flexibility in meeting
the Sameness requirement that the
manufacturers are seeking. At the same
time, this change is acceptable from a
regulatory standpoint given that the
agency’s understanding of the PSEA
language was to allow for variation of
alert sounds across different groups of
vehicles so long as vehicles that are the
same in most other respects would have
the same alert sound. As pointed out by
petitioners, vehicles of the same model
might not be the same in many respects,
but vehicles of the same trim level
would be the same.
17 See
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The regulatory text of sections S4 and
S5.5.1 amended per the above
discussion appears at the end of this
document.
C. Criteria for Sameness of Production
Vehicles
The petitions from Alliance/Global
and Honda raised concerns about the
wording in S5.5.2 of the Sameness
requirement. Paragraph S5.5.2 states
that a ‘‘pedestrian alert system’’
includes all hardware and software
components that are used to generate
the alert sound. That section goes on to
specifically list the types of vehicle
components, including both hardware
and software, that comprise a pedestrian
alert system and that must be the same
on any two vehicles of the same make,
model, and model year. Among the
listed items that must be the same are
‘‘alert system hardware components
including speakers, speaker modules,
and control modules, as evidenced by
specific details such as part numbers
and technical illustrations.’’
The petitioners believe that this
requirement is overly design-restrictive.
In particular, they are concerned that
requiring part numbers to be the same
is not feasible. Alliance/Global stated,
‘‘The regulatory text as written places
part-number specific restrictions on a
vast number of components and as a
result creates a major impediment for
manufacturing.’’ They also state, ‘‘OEMs
may choose to source components from
more than one vendor, and requiring the
use of the ‘same’ hardware and software
may preclude that competitive process.’’
They go on to say that the final rule is
inconsistent with the Vehicle Safety Act
stipulation that each FMVSS must
permit a manufacturer to select any
technology that can meet the
performance requirements. Similarly,
Honda’s petition stated that, in cases
where a shared component such as an
ECU that serves multiple vehicle
functions is modified during a model
year due to changes in vehicle systems
other than the alert system, ‘‘the ECU
part number would change, thus
causing a violation of the Sameness
requirement.’’
The agency has decided to amend the
Sameness requirements as requested to
limit the criteria listed in the final rule
for verifying compliance so that the
digital sound file and the sound
processing algorithm will be the only
criteria that are required to be the same
from one specimen test vehicle to
another. The petitioners stated that
other Sameness criteria listed in the
final rule are hardware-based criteria,
such as component part numbers, and
should not be included because it
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appears to disregard the statutory
requirement to allow ‘‘reasonable
manufacturing tolerances.’’ Also,
requiring hardware-based Sameness
would unnecessarily impede
competitive sourcing of components
and related vehicle manufacturing and
assembly practices. For example,
automakers may source a component
from different suppliers, such that the
components have dissimilar part
numbers even though they are built to
the same OEM specification and have
the same performance. Alliance/Global
also cited a legal precedent under which
NHTSA regulations generally must
avoid being design-restrictive except
when there is a valid safety justification.
To implement the amendment
described above, the agency is adopting
new language based largely on that
suggested by Alliance/Global. The
revisions to paragraph S5.5.2
acknowledge two types of design of a
digital sound-generating system. In
simple terms, one type uses a digitally
coded source, such as a digitally
recorded sound file, which is processed
by a controller program and played back
through the speaker system. Another
type creates the sound without a source
file using programmed algorithms that
generates the signal that is played back
through the speaker system.
D. Alteration of the OEM Alert Sound
Section S8 of the final rule has the
heading ‘‘Prohibition on altering the
sound of a vehicle subject to this
standard.’’ This requirement is
unchanged from what the agency
proposed in the NPRM, and it originated
from a PSEA requirement stating that
the safety standard must ‘‘prohibit
manufacturers from providing any
mechanism for anyone other than the
manufacturer or the dealer to disable,
alter, replace, or modify the sound’’
except to remedy a noncompliance or
defect.
NHTSA’s interpretation of the
purpose of this requirement in the PSEA
was to prevent access to vehicle features
which control the alert sound system so
that it could not be modified, adjusted,
or reprogramed in a way that would
change the emitted sound or render it
noncompliant. In other words, the alert
system needs to be tamper-resistant to
some extent. For example, a vehicle’s
owner-accessible setup menus should
not include a setting that disables the
alert system.
The Alliance/Global expressed
concern with NHTSA’s wording of this
requirement in the final rule. They
stated, ‘‘An OEM may decide to install
a body controller or other component
that may not be dedicated solely to
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FMVSS 141 compliance, but which is
installed—in part—to comply with
FMVSS 141. The PSEA does not
preclude actions to repair such a body
controller for reasons unrelated to
FMVSS 141, yet the final rule appears
to preclude such repairs.’’ They also
state that the requirement in the final
rule exceeds the authority granted by
the PSEA. Alliance’s/Global’s petition
contained suggested edits to the
regulatory text that would remove the
potential conflict in the regulatory text.
Alliance/Global also stated that the
final rule was unnecessarily restrictive
on this issue, and it did not allow for
‘‘reasonable manufacturing tolerance’’
as stipulated in the PSEA. Furthermore,
they along with Honda are concerned
the final rule could prohibit vehicle
repairs or create other obstacles to
vehicle updates when components such
as an electronic control unit or body
control module are shared between the
alert system and other vehicle systems.
We have decided to grant the request
to modify the final rule with respect to
this issue. Although the agency is
uncertain that the existing final rule
language in section S8 actually would
impede any vehicle repair or upgrade,
we are adopting this change because the
language should be clear, and because it
was not the agency’s intention to hinder
any vehicle repair or remedy unrelated
to the pedestrian alert system.
The amended text we are adopting is
that suggested by Alliance/Global. The
revisions appear in the amended text of
section S8 at the end of this document.
E. Crossover Speed
Nissan’s petition request to lower the
crossover speed revisits the issues
raised in Nissan’s comments to the
NPRM. Nissan stated that NHTSA did
not specifically address their May 19,
2014 submission to the NPRM docket on
crossover speed. Nissan’s petition for
reconsideration did not provide any
new information or data that was not
already considered by the agency when
developing the final rule.
NHTSA notes that the final rule
specifically addressed a JASIC study 18
and test data which was the basis of
Nissan’s submission. More importantly,
NHTSA included a new analysis in the
final rule to address comments,
including Nissan’s, about the need to
evaluate crossover speed using
detectability criteria rather than by other
methods. (Those other methods
included comparisons of ICE sound
levels with the engine on and engine off,
referred to as the ‘‘coast down’’ method;
and also, comparisons of the sound
18 See
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level of EVs or HVs to identical or
similar ICE vehicles, called the ‘‘peer
vehicle’’ method.) For the final rule,
NHTSA added a new detectability
analysis for crossover speed using the
Volpe detection model 19 which had
been used to develop the final rule’s
acoustic specifications. In this new
analysis, data from a selection of ICE
vehicles in coast down mode (engine off
to simulate EVs and HVs in electric
mode) was analyzed by the Volpe model
to determine whether the vehicle noise
at each test speed (10, 20, and 30
km/h) had reached a detectable level.
NHTSA’s conclusion from this new
detection-based analysis, which we
included in the final rule preamble to
respond to comments, was that it did
not support lowering the crossover
speed to 20 km/h (12.4 mph).
Furthermore, since this analysis was
based on the detection model rather
than comparisons between vehicles, it
provides a more useful means of
identifying the speed at which added
sound is no longer needed than peer
vehicle and coast down comparisons.20
As Nissan’s petition cited their previous
comment based on the existing JASIC
study rather than providing new
information, NHTSA has no basis to
revise our previous conclusion about
crossover speed.
The agency also notes that the final
rule contained concessions that
indirectly address manufacturer
concerns about crossover speed. In the
final rule, the minimum number of
required one-third octave band
components was reduced from the
proposed number of eight bands. In
addition, all of the required minimum
sound levels for each operating speed
were reduced by 4 dB to offset potential
measurement variation. By virtue of
these changes to the acoustic
specifications, the overall level of
sounds meeting the final rule acoustic
requirements at 30 km/h (60 to 64 dB(A)
for the 4-band option) is very similar to
the overall level of sounds meeting the
NPRM’s proposed 8-band requirements
at 20 km/h (approx. 62 dB(A)).
19 Hastings, et al. Detectability of Alert Signals for
Hybrid and Electric Vehicles: Acoustic Modeling
and Human Subjects Experiment. (2015)
Washington, DC: DOT/NHTSA; available at
www.regulations.gov, Docket NHTSA–2016–0125–
0010.
20 The PSEA defines ‘‘crossover speed’’ as the
speed at which tire noise, wind resistance, or other
factors eliminate the need for a separate alert sound.
Because NHTSA’s detection model attempts to
determine when a vehicle would be detectable to
pedestrians based on the sound from tire noise,
wind resistance, and other factors that may be
present, NHTSA contends that the detection model
is the method for determining crossover speed most
consistent with the language of the PSEA.
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For all the reasons stated above, the
agency’s position continues to be that
lowering the crossover speed from the
30 km/h level contained in both the
NPRM and final rule is not warranted,
and we are denying the Nissan petition
request on this issue.
F. Technical Clarifications in the Nissan
and Honda Petitions
Nissan Technical Issues
Nissan’s petition raised two technical
issues in addition to the petition request
on crossover speed addressed above.
First was a request to allow the use of
adjacent instead of only non-adjacent
one-third octave bands for compliance;
and second was a request to set the
minimum band sum requirements at
each test speed for the 2-band
compliance option to be equal to the
corresponding overall SPLs of the 4band compliance option.
After considering these two technical
requests from Nissan, the agency is not
making any changes to the acoustic
specifications related to these issues.
We note that, while Nissan phrased
these two issues as petition requests, we
are treating them as technical
clarifications because Nissan’s petition
did not directly respond to or
acknowledge the discussion and
explanation in the final rule preamble as
to the agency’s rationale for specifying
non-adjacent bands for compliance and
the agency’s methodology for selecting
the band sum levels for the 2-band
compliance option. The preamble
included a lengthy discussion of
detectability research the agency
conducted after the NPRM had been
published.
On the first issue, the question of
adjacency of bands, Nissan cited a
Zwicker loudness model that, according
to Nissan, shows a frequency band will
mask an adjacent band when the sound
level difference between the two bands
reaches 6 dB or more (in one-third
octave band frequencies). Nissan
pointed out that the difference from any
band to an adjacent one in the final
rule’s required minimum levels is less
than 4 dB for all of the bands included.
Our response to this is that the
masking data cited by Nissan applies to
the masking of a component at the
center of its one-third octave band. If the
masker is shifted toward the signal,
while still in its own one-third octave
band, masking can take place at levels
significantly less than 6 dB.
Although it may be possible,
depending on the ambient, to achieve
detectability using adjacent bands, there
still would be greater susceptibility to
the combined masking effects due to
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8191
adjacent components and the ambient
that are enough to make a barely
perceptible component not perceptible.
This phenomenon appears to have
influenced results of NHTSA’s
validation study 21 in which alert signals
with non-adjacent bands were detected
more consistently (in a standardized 55
dB(A) ambient) than signals with only
adjacent bands.
NHTSA also is concerned that an
acoustic specification allowing adjacent
one-third octave bands is vulnerable to
poor design practice, in that a single
tone placed at the cut-off frequency of
a one third octave band could be
credited for two bands (one on either
side of the cut-off, with a level in both
bands about 3 dB lower than the tone).
A signal like this, though it might
technically meet a 2-band criterion with
adjacent bands allowed, would
disregard NHTSA’s findings about the
importance of spreading signal
components across a wide frequency
range to create robust sounds detectable
in a variety of ambient sound profiles.
For these reasons, we do not agree
with Nissan that adjacent bands should
be allowed in the 2-band and the 4-band
compliance requirements of the FMVSS
No. 141 final rule. Furthermore,
specifying non-adjacent bands imposes
only a minor limitation on alert sound
design, and we did not find any reason
given in Nissan’s submission why this
requirement is unreasonable,
impractical, or burdensome to an extent
that it should be deleted. Therefore, the
agency has decided not to amend the
final rule with respect to the nonadjacency issue raised in Nissan’s
petition.
Regarding the second technical issue
in Nissan’s petition, they requested that
the band sums at each test speed for the
2-band compliance option should be set
equal to the overall SPL levels for the
4-band compliance option. In response,
we first point out that the agency’s
reasons for specifying higher band sums
when using the 2-band option are
discussed in the preamble of the
December 2016 final rule.22 In that
discussion, the agency noted that the 2band specifications were optimized so
that allowable 2-band signals would
achieve a degree of robustness (i.e.,
detectability in a wide range of ambients
normalized to a 55 dB(A)) equivalent to
that achieved by compliant 4-band
signals. To maintain robustness, it was
21 Hastings, et al. Detectability of Alert Signals for
Hybrid and Electric Vehicles: Acoustic Modeling
and Human Subjects Experiment. (2015)
Washington, DC: DOT/NHTSA; available at
www.regulations.gov, Docket NHTSA–2016–0125–
0010.
22 See final rule at 81 FR 90461 to 90463.
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necessary to set the band sum levels
high enough to compensate for the
reduced number of bands. Without this
optimization, the agency would not
have been able to accommodate NPRM
comments calling for a 2-band
approach.
In comparing the 2-band and 4-band
options, robustness is achieved for the
latter by requiring acoustic energy at
threshold levels in a minimum of four
bands and specifying that these four
bands span a minimum of nine onethird octave bands. The idea is that for
an ambient of 55 dB(A), either the
masking components would match
those used for determining thresholds or
masking components would tend not to
spread across a wide range of nine onethird octave bands. Thus, there is a high
likelihood with a 4-band alert signal
that some portion of the vehicle’s sound
will be detectable in an ambient that is
55 dB(A) or lower so that it can be heard
by pedestrians. The 2-band option has
fewer bands and thus fewer
opportunities to have a signal coincide
with an advantageous ambient level.
Instead, it achieves robustness by
requiring a greater overall level (higher
band sum) from the two bands (one
below 800 Hz and one at or above 1000
Hz) that have the most acoustical
energy. There is a fundamental tradeoff
between loudness versus sound
bandwidth when comparing the 2-band
and 4-band options.
In summary, NHTSA believes that the
approach taken in the final rule for
setting the band sum levels for the 2band option is reasonable and
justifiable, and Nissan’s petition did not
include any research or other
information that would persuade the
agency to take a different approach.
Therefore, we are not making the
requested change to the final rule.
Honda Technical Issues
Honda made several comments in its
petition about technical clarifications
they believe are needed in the final rule.
The first issue was whether a vehicle
can switch between 2-band and 4-band
compliance at the different test speeds.
The answer is ‘yes’, it is acceptable to
switch between compliance with the 2band and 4-band options for different
test conditions (stationary, reverse, 10
km/h, 20 km/h, and 30 km/h). In any
test to verify compliance with FMVSS
No. 141, the measured sound of a
vehicle at each test condition would be
checked for compliance with both the 2band and 4-band requirements. For
example, sound measurements of a
vehicle in a 10 km/h pass-by test would
be evaluated relative to both the 2-band
and 4-band specifications, and the
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vehicle could achieve compliance by
meeting one or both specifications. At
20 km/h, the evaluation of both the 2band and 4-band specifications would
be repeated independent of which
specification was complied with at 10
km/h, and the vehicle could again
comply with one or both specifications.
As long as the measured sound at a
given test speed meets at least one of the
two optional specifications, then it
would comply for the particular test
speed.
Regarding evaluating the relative
volume change requirement (S5.4) for
vehicles that switch between 2-band
and 4-band compliance, we note that
relative volume change is based on a
band sum of the whole range of 13
bands in the measured sound at each
test condition, calculated per S7.6 of the
test procedure. Because the criterion is
the band sum of all the bands, relative
volume change evaluation does not
depend on which of the two minimum
sound level options, 2-band or 4-band,
is complied with in each test condition,
and there is no conflict if a vehicle
switches between the two specifications
for different test conditions.
Another technical clarification
requested by Honda was in regard to
section S7.1.6(e) of the December 2016
final rule. That section of the test
procedure specifies which one-third
octave bands should be selected for
compliance evaluations under the 2band compliance option. The
requirement states that the two bands
with the highest levels, one below 1000
Hz and the other at or above 1000 Hz,
should be selected. Honda said that it is
unclear which bands should be selected
in the event that the two bands with the
highest levels are adjacent, i.e., if they
are specifically the 800 Hz and 1000 Hz
bands.
NHTSA recognizes this discrepancy
and agrees that some clarification is
needed. The intent of the final rule was
that the two one-third octave bands (one
below and one at or above 1000 Hz)
with the highest SPLs that are, at the
same time, non-adjacent would be
selected, but the text does not specify
what happens if the two bands with the
highest SPLs are adjacent. In that case,
to maintain non-adjacency, another
band having the next-largest SPL would
have to be substituted for either the 800
Hz or 1000 Hz band. This substitution
involves at least two permutations of
band selection. In one permutation, the
800 Hz band would be selected along
with the band above 1000 Hz with the
second-largest SPL of the bands at or
above 1000 Hz. In the other
permutation, the 1000 Hz band would
be selected along with the band below
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800 Hz with the second-largest SPL of
the bands at or below 800 Hz. Both
combination of two bands selected
according to these restrictions are then
evaluated according to S7.1.6(e)(ii) and
at least one must comply with the
applicable requirements in section S5 of
the Standard.
To make this clear, we are revising the
regulatory text of paragraph S7.1.6(e)(i)
in a manner similar to what Honda
suggested.
As a consequence of Honda’s request
to clarify this language, the agency
identified two additional places in the
regulatory text—in paragraphs S7.1.5(e)
and in S7.3.5(e)—where it is necessary
to insert similar amended text because
those two paragraphs are analogous to
S7.1.6(e), that is, all three of these
paragraphs address an equivalent step
in the procedure, with the only
difference being the test speed. In the
two additional paragraphs, S7.1.5(e) and
S7.3.5(e), we also note that some of the
text that was of concern to Honda in
S7.1.6(e) was inadvertently omitted
from the final rule. Specifically, those
two paragraphs should have included
the sentence, ‘‘One band shall be below
1000 Hz and one band shall be at or
greater than 1000 Hz.’’
To clarify the text and accurately state
the procedural step for selection of
bands to be evaluated for compliance
with the 2-band option, the agency is
revising S7.1.5(e) and S7.3.5(e) using
the same amended text as for S7.1.6(e),
described above, except with different
paragraph references within the text, as
appropriate. The amended text for these
two paragraphs is included at the end of
this document.
In addition to the above text
clarifications and corrections, in section
S7.1.5(e) of the December 2016 final
rule, text applying to one-third octave
band selection for the 4-band
compliance option, but not for the 2band compliance option was included.
The iterative process to select a
combination of four bands to be used to
evaluate compliance does not apply for
the 2-band option. Therefore, the agency
is deleting that sentence from three
sections of the test procedure where it
is not relevant. The amended text
appears at the end of this document.
Lastly, in making the above text
changes, the agency identified a few
minor mistakes and inconsistencies in
the wording of related requirements. In
sub-paragraphs S7.1.5(d)(ii) and
S7.1.5(e)(ii), the words ‘‘of this
paragraph’’ are unnecessary because the
exact paragraph reference numbers are
included in the text. Furthermore, the
phrase ‘‘of this paragraph’’ could lead to
a misunderstanding as it is not entirely
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clear what ‘‘this paragraph’’ refers to.
Thus, we are deleting the phrase ‘‘of this
paragraph’’ in both places. Additionally,
in S7.1.5(e)(ii) and in S7.1.6(d)(ii),
where reference is made to paragraph
‘‘(c)’’ without further specificity, we are
replacing ‘‘(c)’’ with the full paragraph
numbers, ‘‘S7.1.5(c)’’ and ‘‘S7.1.6(c)’’
respectively, to avoid any
misunderstanding and to be consistent
with the wording used in related
sections of the test procedure. Also, to
enhance S7.2, procedure for testing in
Reverse, we are adding the sentence,
‘‘The minimum sound level
requirements for the Reverse test
condition are contained in S5.1.2, Table
2, for 4-band compliance and in S5.2,
Table 6, for 2-band compliance.’’
Similarly, to enhance S7.4 for pass-by
tests above 20 km/h up to 30 km/h and
S7.5 for pass-by tests at 30 km/h, we are
adding an analogous statement to clarify
which S5 requirements apply at those
test speeds. In addition to this edit, we
are re-wording S7.4 to more clearly
express the pass-by speeds that may be
tested. Finally, we are re-wording and
adding an additional sentence to S7.3.6
so that pass-by test speeds above zero
up to 10 km/h are explicitly included
and to include specific reference to the
appropriate requirement tables in S5 for
both the zero to 10 km/h pass-by speed
range and the greater than 10 km/h up
to 20 km/h pass-by speed range.
NHTSA is making these technical
changes in section S7 as part of the
amendments in this document to
respond to Honda’s request and to
correct inconsistencies and minor errors
in the regulatory text. All technical
changes and corrections discussed
above appear in the amended regulatory
text at the end of this document.
Another technical question in
Honda’s petition was how to correctly
calculate the average of the overall SPL
values in section S7.1.4 of the test
procedure. The answer to Honda’s
question is that a linear average is taken,
which is the sum of the SPL values
divided by four. The result is rounded
to a tenth of a decibel, as specified in
the test procedure. We also point out, as
discussed in more detail in the
following paragraph, that NHTSA
intends to provide a computer program
for compliance evaluation that will
automatically execute all necessary
calculations including averaging overall
SPLs for S7.1.4(c).
As a general response to Honda’s
comments, we note that the agency has
been developing a ‘‘NHTSA Compliance
Tool’’ for FMVSS No. 141, which is a
programmed, computer-based
application to facilitate compliance
testing. As discussed in the final rule
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preamble,23 NHTSA intends to make
this tool available publicly so that
OEMs, test labs, suppliers, and others
will have access to and full use of this
tool, similar to what the agency did for
FMVSS No. 126, Electronic Stability
Control. This compliance tool will
include a user interface that will prompt
for test data input and will
automatically evaluate vehicle
compliance based on the input. All test
data processing steps and calculations
in section S7 of the safety standard are
built-in to the tool. For example, with
respect to Honda’s technical questions,
the tool will execute the band selection
and calculate averages needed to verify
compliance with the 2-band and 4-band
specifications at each test speed, as well
as compliance with the volume change
requirements. The tool will evaluate all
possible band combinations, such that if
the situation regarding S7.1.6(e) cited by
Honda were to arise, the tool would
evaluate all combinations of the two
highest non-adjacent bands above and
below 1000 Hz.
The last technical issue raised in
Honda’s petition was about indoor
testing. Honda stated that indoor testing
should be optional, and it is preferable
for certification of vehicles to FMVSS
No. 141. Honda also stated that indoor
testing is accommodated in the
European regulation, United Nations
Economic Commission for Europe
Regulation (UN ECE) No. 138, Uniform
Provisions Concerning the Approval of
Quiet Road Transport Vehicles with
Regards to Their Reduced Audibility.
Honda cited factors such as Doppler
shift that influence outdoor testing, and
stated that indoor testing has better
stability and efficiency for sound
measurement.
In response to this, the agency points
out that the preamble of the December
2016 final rule addressed indoor
testing 24 because this topic was raised
in several NPRM comments. The agency
acknowledged some advantages of
indoor testing in hemi-anechoic
chambers but also pointed out several
reasons why outdoor testing on an ISOcompatible test pad is preferable, and
concluded that the agency intends to
conduct its own compliance tests using
outdoor facilities. Importantly, with
regard to Honda’s indoor testing
comment in their petition, the agency
notes that the absence of a specific test
procedure for indoor testing in the final
rule does not mean indoor testing is
prohibited. On the contrary, vehicle
manufacturers, suppliers, and others
have the discretion to conduct FMVSS
23 See
24 See
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81 FR 90481.
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No. 141 certification tests indoors as
long as they can certify that a vehicle
fully complies with the Safety Standard.
G. Other Comments Relevant to the
Final Rule
The comment from Publicresource.org
expressed concern with public
availability of technical documents that
were incorporated by reference into the
final rule. However, their docket
submission did not specify any
particular reasons that they believe
various parties such as consumer
protection groups, small manufacturers,
hobbyists, and students would not have
adequate access to these reference
documents. Thus, NHTSA is not able to
provide a response to more adequately
address any concerns they might have.
Given that the subject documents from
SAE, ISO, and ANSI are copyrighted
material, the agency followed its normal
practice in making them publicly
available, which includes keeping a
printed copy of each of the reference
documents on hand at NHTSA
headquarters. Printed copies of the
referenced documents are also available
at the National Archives and Records
Administration. The public availability
of documents incorporated by reference
was discussed in Section VI of the
December 14, 2016, final rule.25
V. Response to Petitions for
Reconsideration
Pursuant to the process established
under 49 CFR part 553.37, after
carefully considering all aspects of the
petition, except for the request regarding
driver selectable sounds, NHTSA has
decided to grant the petitions discussed
above without further proceedings.
VI. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
Executive Order 12866, Executive Order
13563, and DOT Regulatory Policies and
Procedures
Executive Order 12866, Executive
Order 13563, and the Department of
Transportation’s regulatory policies
require this agency to make
determinations as to whether a
regulatory action is ‘‘significant’’ and
therefore subject to OMB review and the
requirements of the aforementioned
Executive Orders. The Executive Order
12866 defines a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as one that is likely to result in
a rule that may:
(1) Have an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more or
adversely affect in a material way the
economy, a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
25 See
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State, local, or Tribal governments or
communities;
(2) Create a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action taken
or planned by another agency;
(3) Materially alter the budgetary
impact of entitlements, grants, user fees,
or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or
(4) Raise novel legal or policy issues
arising out of legal mandates, the
President’s priorities, or the principles
set forth in the Executive Order.
We have considered the potential
impact of this final rule under Executive
Order 12866, Executive Order 13563,
and the Department of Transportation’s
regulatory policies and procedures and
have determined that today’s final rule
is not significant for any of the
aforementioned reasons. This final rule
only makes minor adjustments to the
existing requirements of FMVSS No.
141. We are adjusting the phase-in
schedule and its reporting requirements
to give manufacturers additional time to
comply with the requirements of the
final rule. We are also making several
minor amendments to the rule to clarify
the rule’s requirements. We thus
anticipate that the economic impacts of
this final rule will be limited.
Executive Order 13771
Executive Order 13771 titled
‘‘Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs,’’ directs that, unless
prohibited by law, whenever an
executive department or agency
publicly proposes for notice and
comment or otherwise promulgates a
new regulation, it shall identify at least
two existing regulations to be repealed.
In addition, any new incremental costs
associated with new regulations shall, to
the extent permitted by law, be offset by
the elimination of existing costs. Only
those rules deemed significant under
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866,
‘‘Regulatory Planning and Review,’’ are
subject to these requirements. As
discussed above, this rule is not a
significant rule under Executive Order
12866 and, accordingly, is not subject to
the offset requirements of 13771.
NHTSA has determined that this
rulemaking is a deregulatory action
under E.O. 13771, as it imposes no costs
and, instead, amends FMVSS No. 141 to
give manufacturers of hybrid and
electric vehicles greater flexibility
during the manufacturing process and
when sourcing parts that comprise the
alert sound system. This final rule also
provides flexibility to manufacturers by
allowing them to differentiate hybrid
and electric vehicles of different trim
levels within a vehicle model by
allowing vehicles of different trim levels
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to produce different sounds. This final
rule also amends FMVSS No. 141 to
delay the date by which manufacturers
are required to fully comply with the
requirements of the standard by one
year.
Delaying the compliance date of
FMVSS No. 141 for one year will result
in a cost savings to manufacturers of
hybrid and electric vehicles to which
the standard applies of $21M to
$20.75M for MY 2019 and $21M to
$20.75M75 for MY 2020 at the three and
seven percent discount rates,
respectively. These cost savings will
accrue because manufacturers of hybrid
and electric vehicles to which the
standard applies will not have to
comply with the phase-in requirements
of the standard until September 1, 2019
and will not have to fully comply with
the standard’s requirements until
September 1, 2020. NHTSA contends
that these cost savings estimates are
conservative and that the true cost
savings of the rule are likely to be higher
because, as discussed above, the cost
benefit analysis accompanying the
December 2016 final rule assumed a
longer compliance lead time and did not
account for costs that may have been
necessary to comply with the rule in a
shorter time period.
Executive Order 13609: Promoting
International Regulatory Cooperation
The policy statement in section 1 of
Executive Order 13609 provides, in part:
The regulatory approaches taken by foreign
governments may differ from those taken by
U.S. regulatory agencies to address similar
issues. In some cases, the differences
between the regulatory approaches of U.S.
agencies and those of their foreign
counterparts might not be necessary and
might impair the ability of American
businesses to export and compete
internationally. In meeting shared challenges
involving health, safety, labor, security,
environmental, and other issues,
international regulatory cooperation can
identify approaches that are at least as
protective as those that are or would be
adopted in the absence of such cooperation.
International regulatory cooperation can also
reduce, eliminate, or prevent unnecessary
differences in regulatory requirements.
In the preamble to the December 2016
final rule we discussed the reasons for
the differences in the regulatory
approach taken by foreign governments
that have addressed this issue. As stated
above, we are declining to adopt a test
procedure for indoor testing included in
UN ECE Reg. No. 138. NHTSA’s test
procedures are not requirements that
manufacturers must follow when
certifying vehicles to the FMVSS and
manufacturers are free to choose
whatever certification method they wish
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as long as the manufacturer can
demonstrate a good faith basis for
certification.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., as amended by
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of
1996), whenever an agency is required
to publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking or final rule, it must prepare
and make available for public comment
a regulatory flexibility analysis that
describes the effect of the rule on small
entities (i.e., small businesses, small
organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions). The Small Business
Administration’s regulations at 13 CFR
part 121 define a small business, in part,
as a business entity ‘‘which operates
primarily within the United States.’’ (13
CFR 121.105(a)). No regulatory
flexibility analysis is required if the
head of an agency certifies the proposal
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. SBREFA amended the
Regulatory Flexibility Act to require
Federal agencies to provide a statement
of the factual basis for certifying that a
proposal will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
I hereby certify that this rule would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. This final rule does not make
any significant changes to the existing
FMVSS No. 141. Instead, this rule aligns
the phase-in requirements with
manufacturers’ design and production
cycles, and makes other minor
adjustments to specific regulatory text to
facilitate manufacturer compliance with
the new FMVSS No. 141. It also clarifies
some technical requirements and test
procedures. The final requirements as
amended in this document afford more
lead time, and somewhat greater clarity
and flexibility to vehicle manufacturers
while maintaining the safety goals and
benefits of the enabling statute, the
PSEA, under which FMVSS No. 141
was created.
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
NHTSA has examined today’s final
rule pursuant to Executive Order 13132
(64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999) and
concluded that no additional
consultation with States, local
governments or their representatives is
mandated beyond the rulemaking
process. The agency has concluded that
the rulemaking would not have
sufficient federalism implications to
warrant consultation with State and
local officials or the preparation of a
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federalism summary impact statement.
Today’s final rule does not have
‘‘substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’
NHTSA rules can have preemptive
effect in two ways. First, the National
Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act
contains an express preemption
provision:
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
When a motor vehicle safety standard is in
effect under this chapter, a State or a political
subdivision of a State may prescribe or
continue in effect a standard applicable to
the same aspect of performance of a motor
vehicle or motor vehicle equipment only if
the standard is identical to the standard
prescribed under this chapter. 49 U.S.C.
30103(b)(1).
It is this statutory command by
Congress that preempts any nonidentical State legislative and
administrative law addressing the same
aspect of performance.
The express preemption provision
described above is subject to a savings
clause under which ‘‘[c]ompliance with
a motor vehicle safety standard
prescribed under this chapter does not
exempt a person from liability at
common law.’’ 49 U.S.C. 30103(e).
Pursuant to this provision, State
common law tort causes of action
against motor vehicle manufacturers
that might otherwise be preempted by
the express preemption provision are
generally preserved. However, the
Supreme Court has recognized the
possibility, in some instances, of
implied preemption of State common
law tort causes of action by virtue of
NHTSA’s rules—even if not expressly
preempted.
This second way that NHTSA rules
can preempt is dependent upon the
existence of an actual conflict between
an FMVSS and the higher standard that
would effectively be imposed on motor
vehicle manufacturers if someone
obtained a State common law tort
judgment against the manufacturer—
notwithstanding the manufacturer’s
compliance with the NHTSA standard.
Because most NHTSA standards
established by an FMVSS are minimum
standards, a State common law tort
cause of action that seeks to impose a
higher standard on motor vehicle
manufacturers will generally not be
preempted. However, if and when such
a conflict does exist—for example, when
the standard at issue is both a minimum
and a maximum standard—the State
common law tort cause of action is
impliedly preempted. See Geier v.
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American Honda Motor Co., 529 U.S.
861 (2000).
Pursuant to Executive Order 13132,
NHTSA has considered whether this
rule could or should preempt State
common law causes of action. The
agency’s ability to announce its
conclusion regarding the preemptive
effect of one of its rules reduces the
likelihood that preemption will be an
issue in any subsequent tort litigation.
To this end, the agency has examined
the nature (e.g., the language and
structure of the regulatory text) and
objectives of today’s final rule and finds
that this rule, like many NHTSA rules,
prescribes only a minimum safety
standard. Accordingly, NHTSA does not
intend that this final rule preempt state
tort law that would effectively impose a
higher standard on motor vehicle
manufacturers than that established by
today’s final rule. Establishment of a
higher standard by means of State tort
law would not conflict with the
minimum standard established in this
document. Without any conflict, there
could not be any implied preemption of
a State common law tort cause of action.
NHTSA solicited comments from the
States and other interested parties on
this assessment of issues relevant to
E.O. 13132 in the NPRM. However, we
did not receive any comments with
regard to this issue.
Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice
Reform)
When promulgating a regulation,
Executive Order 12988 specifically
requires that the agency must make
every reasonable effort to ensure that the
regulation, as appropriate: (1) Specifies
in clear language the preemptive effect;
(2) specifies in clear language the effect
on existing Federal law or regulation,
including all provisions repealed,
circumscribed, displaced, impaired, or
modified; (3) provides a clear legal
standard for affected conduct rather
than a general standard, while
promoting simplification and burden
reduction; (4) specifies in clear language
the retroactive effect; (5) specifies
whether administrative proceedings are
to be required before parties may file
suit in court; (6) explicitly or implicitly
defines key terms; and (7) addresses
other important issues affecting clarity
and general draftsmanship of
regulations.
Pursuant to this Order, NHTSA notes
as follows. The preemptive effect of this
final rule is discussed above in
connection with Executive Order 13132.
NHTSA notes further that there is no
requirement that individuals submit a
petition for reconsideration or pursue
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8195
other administrative proceeding before
they may file suit in court.
Executive Order 13045 (Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks)
Executive Order 13045, ‘‘Protection of
Children from Environmental Health
and Safety Risks,’’ (62 FR 19885; April
23, 1997) applies to any proposed or
final rule that: (1) Is determined to be
‘‘economically significant,’’ as defined
in Executive Order 12866, and (2)
concerns an environmental health or
safety risk that NHTSA has reason to
believe may have a disproportionate
effect on children. If a rule meets both
criteria, the agency must evaluate the
environmental health or safety effects of
the rule on children, and explain why
the rule is preferable to other potentially
effective and reasonably feasible
alternatives considered by the agency.
This final rule is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because it is not
economically significant.
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Under the National Technology
Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
(NTTAA) (Pub. L. 104–113), ‘‘all Federal
agencies and departments shall use
technical standards that are developed
or adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies, using such technical
standards as a means to carry out policy
objectives or activities determined by
the agencies and departments.’’
Voluntary consensus standards are
technical standards (e.g., materials
specifications, test methods, sampling
procedures, and business practices) that
are developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies, such as the
Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE).
The NTTAA directs us to provide
Congress, through OMB, explanations
when we decide not to use available and
applicable voluntary consensus
standards.
Pursuant to the above requirements,
the agency conducted a review of
voluntary consensus standards to
determine if any were applicable to this
final rule. For the specific provisions
that we are adjusting in this rule, there
were no applicable consensus
standards.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 requires agencies to prepare a
written assessment of the costs, benefits,
and other effects of proposed or final
rules that include a Federal mandate
likely to result in the expenditure by
State, local, or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of
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more than $100 million annually
(adjusted for inflation with base year of
1995). We note that as this final rule
only makes minor adjustments and
clarifications to FMVSS No. 141. Thus,
it would not result in expenditures by
any of the aforementioned entities of
over $100 million annually.
NHTSA has analyzed this rulemaking
action for the purposes of the National
Environmental Policy Act. The agency
has determined that implementation of
this action would not have any
significant impact on the quality of the
human environment. NHTSA has also
determined that the changes in this final
rule would not change the findings in
the Final Environmental Assessment
prepared in connection with the final
rule.26
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA), a person is not required
to respond to a collection of information
by a Federal agency unless the
collection displays a valid OMB control
number. While this final rule adjusts the
timing of the phase-in reporting
requirements to match the
manufacturer’s production year (i.e., to
align the requirement with other
potential phase-in reports that the
manufacturer may need to produce), it
includes no new collection of
information because the actual reporting
requirements are the same as the
requirements in the April 2014 final
rule.
Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
The Department of Transportation
assigns a regulation identifier number
(RIN) to each regulatory action listed in
the Unified Agenda of Federal
Regulations. The Regulatory Information
Service Center publishes the Unified
Agenda in April and October of each
year. You may use the RIN contained in
the heading at the beginning of this
document to find this action in the
Unified Agenda.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 571
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115,
30117, and 30166; delegation of authority at
49 CFR 1.95.
2. Amend § 571.141 by adding a
definition for ‘‘trim level’’ in paragraph
S4, and revising paragraphs S5.5.1,
S5.5.2, S7.1, S7.1.5 introductory text,
S7.1.5(d) introductory text, S7.1.5(d)(ii),
S7.1.5(e), S7.1.6 introductory text,
S7.1.6(d) introductory text, S7.1.6(d)(ii),
S7.1.6(e), S7.2, S7.3.5 introductory text,
S7.3.5(d) introductory text, S7.3.5(e),
and S7.3.6, S7.4, S7.5, S8, and S9 to
read as follows:
§ 571.141 Standard No. 141; Minimum
Sound Requirements for Hybrid and
Electric Vehicles.
*
Paperwork Reduction Act
Imports, Incorporation by reference,
Motor vehicle safety, Reporting and
recordkeeping, Tires.
In consideration of the foregoing,
NHTSA amends 49 CFR part 571 as
follows:
26 The Final EA is available in Docket No.
NHTSA–2011–0100 at https://www.regulations.gov.
14:55 Feb 23, 2018
1. The authority citation for part 571
of title 49 continues to read as follows:
■
■
National Environmental Policy Act
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PART 571—FEDERAL MOTOR
VEHICLE SAFETY STANDARDS
Jkt 244001
*
*
*
*
S4 * * *
‘‘Trim level’’ is defined to mean a
subset of vehicles within the same
model designation with the same body
type and which are alike in their general
level of standard equipment, such as a
‘‘base’’ trim level of a vehicle model.
Vehicles with only minor trim
differences that are unlikely to affect
vehicle-emitted sound are not
considered different for the purposes of
this safety standard.
*
*
*
*
*
S5.5 * * *
S5.5.1 Any two vehicles of the same
make, model, model year, body type,
and trim level (as those terms are
defined in 49 CFR 565.12 or in section
S4 of this safety standard) to which this
safety standard applies shall be
designed to have the same pedestrian
alert sound when operating under the
same test conditions and at the same
speed including any test conditions and
speeds for which an alert sound is
required in Section S5 of this safety
standard.
S5.5.2 For the purposes of this
requirement, the pedestrian alert sound
of vehicles which meet the applicable
requirements in S5.1 through S5.4 of
this standard are deemed to be the same
if the digital source of the sound, if any,
is the same and if the algorithms that
either generate the sound directly or
process the digital source to generate the
sound are the same.
*
*
*
*
*
S7.1 Stationary vehicle in forward
gear.
*
*
*
*
*
S7.1.5 Select one-third octave bands
to be used for evaluating compliance
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with detection requirements for a
stationary vehicle.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) For alerts designed to meet the
four-band requirements of S5.1 of this
standard:
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) Compare the average corrected
sound pressure level from S7.1.5(c) in
each of the four one-third octave bands
selected in paragraph S7.1.5(d)(i) to the
required minimum level of the
corresponding one-third octave band
specified in paragraph S5.1.1, Table 1,
to determine compliance.
(e) For alerts designed to meet the
two-band requirements of S5.2 of this
standard:
(i) Select the two one-third octave
bands, one below 1000 Hz and one at or
above 1000 Hz, having the largest Aweighted SPL values within the range of
315 Hz up to 3150 Hz and that are nonadjacent to each other to evaluate
according to S7.1.5(e)(ii), below. In the
event that the pair of bands with the
largest SPL values are the 800 Hz and
1000 Hz bands, then select both of the
following pairs to evaluate according
S7.1.5(e)(ii): The 800 Hz band along
with the band having the second-largest
A-weighted SPL value from the 1000 Hz
and above bands; and, the 1000 Hz band
along with the band having the secondlargest A-weighted SPL value from the
800 Hz and below bands. At least one
of the band pairs selected as specified
in this paragraph shall meet the
minimum requirements when evaluated
according to S7.1.5(e)(ii).
(ii) Compare the average corrected
sound pressure level from S7.1.5(c) in
each of the two one-third octave bands
selected in paragraph S7.1.5(e)(i) to the
required minimum level of the
corresponding one-third octave band
specified in paragraph S5.2, Table 6.
Also, compare the band sum of the two
bands to the required minimum band
sum in Table 6.
S7.1.6 Select one-third octave bands
to be used for evaluating compliance
with directivity requirements for a
stationary vehicle.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) For alerts designed to meet the
four-band requirements of S5.1 of this
standard:
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) Compare the average corrected
sound pressure level from S7.1.6(c) in
each of the four one-third octave bands
selected in paragraph S7.1.6(d)(i) to the
required minimum level of the
corresponding one-third octave band
specified in paragraph S5.1.1, Table 1,
to determine compliance.
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(e) For alerts designed to meet the
two-band requirements of S5.2 of this
standard:
(i) Select the two one-third octave
bands, one below 1000 Hz and one at or
above 1000 Hz, having the largest Aweighted SPL values within the range of
315 Hz up to 3150 Hz and that are nonadjacent to each other to evaluate
according to S7.1.6(e)(ii), below. In the
event that the pair of bands with the
largest SPL values are the 800 Hz and
1000 Hz bands, then select both of the
following pairs to evaluate according
S7.1.6(e)(ii): The 800 Hz band along
with the band having the second-largest
A-weighted SPL value from the 1000 Hz
and above bands; and, the 1000 Hz band
along with the band having the secondlargest A-weighted SPL value from the
800 Hz and below bands. At least one
of the band pairs selected as specified
in this paragraph shall meet the
minimum requirements when evaluated
according to S7.1.6(e)(ii), below.
(ii) Compare the average corrected
sound pressure level from S7.1.6(c) in
each of the two one-third octave bands
selected in paragraph S7.1.6(e)(i) to the
required minimum level of the
corresponding one-third octave band
specified in paragraph S5.2, Table 6.
Also, compare the band sum of the two
bands to the required minimum band
sum in Table 6.
S7.2 Stationary vehicle in reverse
gear. Test the vehicle per S7.1.1 through
S7.1.5 except that the rear plane of the
vehicle is placed on the PP’ line, no
center microphone is used, and the
vehicle’s transmission gear selector is
placed in the ‘Reverse’ position. The
minimum sound level requirements for
the Reverse test condition are contained
in S5.1.2, Table 2, for four-band
compliance and in S5.2, Table 6, for
two-band compliance.
*
*
*
*
*
S7.3.5 Select one-third octave bands
to be used for evaluating compliance
with the constant speed pass-by
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) For alerts designed to meet the
four-band requirements of S5.1 of this
standard:
*
*
*
*
*
(e) For alerts designed to meet the
two-band requirements of S5.2 of this
standard:
(i) Select the two one-third octave
bands, one below 1000 Hz and one at or
above 1000 Hz, having the largest Aweighted SPL values within the range of
315 Hz up to 3150 Hz and that are nonadjacent to each other to evaluate
according to S7.3.5(e)(ii), below. In the
event that the pair of bands with the
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largest SPL values are the 800 Hz and
1000 Hz bands, then select both of the
following pairs to evaluate according
S7.3.5(e)(ii): The 800 Hz band along
with the band having the second-largest
A-weighted SPL value from the 1000 Hz
and above bands; and, the 1000 Hz band
along with the band having the secondlargest A-weighted SPL value from the
800 Hz and below bands. At least one
of the band pairs selected as specified
in this paragraph shall meet the
minimum requirements when evaluated
according to S7.3.5(e)(ii), below.
(ii) Compare the average corrected
sound pressure level from S7.3.5(c) in
each of the two one-third octave bands
selected in paragraph S7.3.5(e)(i) to the
required minimum level of the
corresponding one-third octave band
specified in paragraph S5.2, Table 6.
Also, compare the band sum of the two
bands to the required minimum band
sum in Table 6.
S7.3.6 The procedures in S7.3.1
through S7.3.5 may be repeated for any
pass-by test speed greater than 0 km/h
and less than 20 km/h. For test speeds
greater than 0 km/h and less than 10
km/h, the minimum sound level
requirements are contained in S5.1.1,
Table 1, for four-band compliance and
in S5.2, Table 6, for two-band
compliance. For test speeds greater than
or equal to 10 km/h and less than 20
km/h, the minimum sound level
requirements are contained in S5.1.3,
Table 3, for 4-band compliance and in
S5.2, Table 6, for 2-band compliance.
S7.4 Pass-by tests at speeds greater
than or equal to 20 km/h and less than
30 km/h. Repeat the procedures of S7.3
at 21 km/h ± 1 km/h. The procedures in
S7.3 also may be repeated for any passby test speed greater than 20 km/h and
less than 30 km/h. For this range of test
speeds, the minimum sound level
requirements are contained in S5.1.4,
Table 4, for four-band compliance and
in S5.2, Table 6, for two-band
compliance.
S7.5 Pass-by tests at 30 km/h.
Repeat the procedures of S7.3 at 31 km/
h ± 1 km/h. For this test speed, the
minimum sound level requirements are
contained in S5.1.5, Table 5, for fourband compliance and in S5.2, Table 6,
for two-band compliance.
*
*
*
*
*
S8 Prohibition on altering the sound
of a vehicle subject to this standard. No
entity subject to the authority of the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration may:
(a) Disable, alter, replace, or modify
any element of a vehicle installed as
original equipment for purposes of
complying with this Standard, except in
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8197
connection with a repair of a vehicle
malfunction or to remedy a defect or
non-compliance; or
(b) Provide any person with any
mechanism, equipment, process, or
device intended to disable, alter,
replace, or modify the sound emitting
capability of a vehicle subject to this
standard, except in connection with a
repair of vehicle malfunction or to
remedy a defect or non-compliance.
S9 Phase-in schedule.
S9.1 Hybrid and Electric Vehicles
manufactured on or after September 1,
2019, and before September 1, 2020. For
hybrid and electric vehicles to which
this standard applies manufactured on
and after September 1, 2019, and before
September 1, 2020, except vehicles
produced by small volume
manufacturers, the quantity of hybrid
and electric vehicles complying with
this safety standard shall be not less
than 50 percent of one or both of the
following:
(a) A manufacturer’s average annual
production of hybrid and electric
vehicles on and after September 1, 2016,
and before September 1, 2019;
(b) A manufacturer’s total production
of hybrid and electric vehicles on and
after September 1, 2019, and before
September 1, 2020.
S9.2 Hybrid and Electric Vehicles
manufactured on or after September 1,
2020. All hybrid and electric vehicles to
which this standard applies
manufactured on and after September 1,
2020, shall comply with this safety
standard.
PART 585—PHASE-IN REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
3. The authority citation for Part 585
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115,
30117, and 30166; delegation of authority at
49 CFR 1.95
■
4. Revise § 585.130 to read as follows:
§ 585.130
Applicability.
This subpart applies to manufacturers
of hybrid and electric passenger cars,
trucks, buses, multipurpose passenger
vehicles, and low-speed vehicles subject
to the phase-in requirements of
§ 571.141, S9.1 Hybrid and Electric
Vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2019, and before
September 1, 2020.
■ 5. Revise § 585.132 to read as follows:
§ 585.132
Response to inquiries.
At any time during the production
year ending August 31, 2019, each
manufacturer shall, upon request from
the Office of Vehicle Safety Compliance,
provide information identifying the
E:\FR\FM\26FER1.SGM
26FER1
8198
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 38 / Monday, February 26, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
vehicles (by make, model and vehicle
identification number) that have been
certified as complying with the
requirements of Standard No. 141,
Minimum Sound Requirements for
Hybrid and Electric Vehicles (49 CFR
571.141). The manufacturer’s
designation of a vehicle as a certified
vehicle is irrevocable.
■ 6. In § 585.133, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
§ 585.133
Reporting requirements.
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES
(a) Phase-in reporting requirements.
Within 60 days after the end of the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:55 Feb 23, 2018
Jkt 244001
production year ending August 31,
2019, each manufacturer shall submit a
report to the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration concerning its
compliance with the requirements of
Standard No. 141 Minimum Sound
Requirements for Hybrid and Electric
Vehicles (49 CFR 571.141) for its
vehicles produced in that year. Each
report shall provide the information
specified in paragraph (b) of this section
and in § 585.2 of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
■
§ 585.134
Records.
Each manufacturer shall maintain
records of the Vehicle Identification
Number for each vehicle for which
information is reported under § 585.133
until December 31, 2024.
Issued in Washington, DC, under authority
delegated in 49 CFR 1.95 and 501.5.
Heidi R. King,
Deputy Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2018–03721 Filed 2–23–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
7. Revise § 585.134 to read as follows:
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
E:\FR\FM\26FER1.SGM
26FER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 38 (Monday, February 26, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 8182-8198]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-03721]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA-2018-0018]
RIN 2127-AL84
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 141, Minimum Sound
Requirements for Hybrid and Electric Vehicles
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule; response to petitions for reconsideration.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document responds to petitions for reconsideration
regarding NHTSA's December 2016 final rule which established new
Federal motor vehicle safety standard (FMVSS) No. 141, ``Minimum sound
for hybrid and electric vehicles.'' The agency received submissions
from three petitioners requesting six discrete changes to the final
rule, and also received technical questions from the petitioners. After
consideration of the petitions and all supporting information, NHTSA
has decided to grant the petitions for four of the discrete changes,
deny one, and request comment in a separate document for the sixth
proposed change.
DATES: Effective April 27, 2018.
Compliance dates: Compliance with FMVSS No. 141 and related
regulations, as amended in this rule, is required for all hybrid and
electric vehicles to which these regulations are applicable beginning
on September 1, 2020. The initial compliance date for newly
manufactured vehicles under the 50-percent phase-in as specified in
FMVSS No. 141 is delayed by one year to September 1, 2019.
Petitions for reconsideration of this final action must be received
not later than April 12, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Correspondence related to this rule including petitions for
reconsideration and comments should refer to the docket number in the
heading of this document and be submitted to: Administrator, National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, West Building, Washington,
DC 20590.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: You may contact Mr. Thomas Healy in
NHTSA's Office of the Chief Counsel regarding legal issues at (202)
366-2992 or FAX: 202-366-3820. For non-legal issues, you may contact
Mr. Michael Pyne, NHTSA Office of Crash Avoidance Standards, at (202)
366-4171 or FAX: 202-493-2990.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Of the six requested changes contained in
the petitions, NHTSA is granting the petition request to postpone the
compliance phase-in schedule by one year. NHTSA also is granting two
petition requests relating to the ``Sameness'' requirements in the
final rule to further allow variations in alert sound across different
vehicle types, and to reduce the number of compliance criteria to meet
the sameness standards. In addition, NHTSA is granting a petition
request to modify the regulatory language to permit the alteration of
the alert sound as originally equipped on a vehicle for repairs and
recall remedies. NHTSA has decided to deny one petition request to
change the crossover speed, which is the speed above which the
pedestrian alert sound is allowed to turn off, from 30 kilometers per
hour (km/h) to 20 km/h. The agency has determined that the available
information on lowering the crossover speed does not warrant making
that change.
Furthermore, regarding a petition request to allow vehicles to be
manufactured with a suite of driver-selectable pedestrian alert sounds,
the agency is neither granting nor denying that request in this
document. Instead, NHTSA intends to issue a separate document at a
later date to seek comment on the issue of driver-selectable sounds.
Additionally, this document addresses a few requests for technical
changes and provides a few clarifications of final rule technical
requirements raised in the petitions. Lastly, this document responds to
a comment on the final rule about the availability of industry
technical standards incorporated by reference in the final rule.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
B. Final Rule
III. Petitions for Reconsideration Received by NHTSA
A. Alliance/Global Petition for Reconsideration and Letters of
Support
B. Honda Petition for Reconsideration
C. Nissan Petition for Reconsideration
D. Other Issues
IV. Agency Response and Decision
A. Phase-In Schedule, Compliance Dates, and Lead Time
B. Sameness Requirement for Same Make, Model, Model Year
Vehicles
C. Criteria for Sameness of Production Vehicles
D. Alteration of the OEM Alert Sound
E. Crossover Speed
F. Technical Clarifications in the Nissan and Honda Petitions
G. Other Comments Relevant to the Final Rule
V. Response to Petitions for Reconsideration
VI. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
I. Executive Summary
Pursuant to the Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act of 2010
(PSEA),\1\ NHTSA issued a final rule on December 14, 2016, to create a
new FMVSS setting minimum sound level requirements for low-speed
operation of hybrid and electric light vehicles. The minimum sound
requirements provide a means for blind and other pedestrians as well as
bicyclists and other road users to detect the presence of these so-
called quiet vehicles and thereby reduce the risk that these vehicles
will be involved in low-speed pedestrian crashes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act of 2010, Public Law 111-
373, 124 Stat. 4086 (2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After the final rule was published, NHTSA received timely petitions
for reconsideration \2\ from three sources: The Auto Alliance in
conjunction with Global Automakers (Alliance/Global); American Honda
Motor Company, Inc. (Honda); and Nissan North America, Inc. (Nissan).
These petitions requested several changes covering several aspects of
the final rule. Of the various issues covered in these petitions, NHTSA
identified the following six discrete requests for specific changes to
requirements in the final rule (listed here in the order they appear in
the Alliance/Global, Honda, and Nissan petitions):
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The final rule allowed 45 days for submitting petitions for
reconsideration, resulting in a deadline of January 30, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. To delay by one year both the compliance phase-in schedule and
the date by which all vehicle production must comply with the rule
(section S9);
2. To limit the compliance criteria for the Sameness requirement
(section S5.5.2) to only the digital sound file and digital processing
algorithm;
3. To modify the Sameness requirement (S5.5.1) to allow alert
sounds to vary by trim level or model series rather than just by make/
model;
4. To modify section S8, which prohibits altering the factory-
equipped alert sound, to allow recall remedies
[[Page 8183]]
and vehicle repairs when components of the alert system are shared with
other vehicle systems;
5. To lower the crossover speed from 30 km/h (18.6 mph) to 20 km/h
(12.4 mph);
6. To modify the Sameness requirement so that a vehicle can be
equipped with a suite of up to five driver-selectable alert sounds.
To facilitate the agency's response to the petitions, we are
treating each of these six issues as separate petition requests and
addressing them individually in this document.
As fully discussed later in this rule, the agency is granting
several of these petition requests, specifically the first four issues
listed above. We believe the corresponding adjustments to the final
rule will clarify requirements, provide more flexibility to vehicle
manufacturers, and remove potential barriers to achieving compliance,
while having no foreseeable impact on the safety benefits estimated in
the December 2016 final rule, as this rule simply corrects an error in
the original final rule related to the phase-in schedule and does not
make changes that affect the substance of the required alert sound. The
agency is denying the fifth item above, relating to cross-over speed,
because no new data or analyses have been presented that would justify
reversing the agency's previous conclusion on cross-over speed as
presented in the final rule preamble. As for the last item, on driver-
selectable sounds, the agency has decided to request public comment
before deciding how to respond to that request, and NHTSA intends to
issue a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) or other Federal Register
document on that issue.
In this document, the agency also responds to two issues raised by
Nissan relating to acoustic specifications in the final rule. In
addition, in response to technical questions in the Honda petition, we
are providing several clarifications of some requirements.
Lastly, in this document, NHTSA is responding to two comments
submitted to the docket, one from Ford regarding the legality of
equipping certain vehicles used for security purposes with a means of
turning off the required pedestrian alert sound, and the other from
PublicResource.org regarding the availability to the general public of
technical documents, including industry standards from SAE, ISO, and
ANSI, incorporated by reference in the final rule.
Phase-In Schedule and Lead Time
The Alliance/Global and Honda petitions along with a supplemental
submission from Alliance/Global and a supporting comment from General
Motors Corporation discussed several reasons related to vehicle design,
development, and manufacturing that will make it very difficult if not
impossible for manufacturers to meet the final rule's compliance phase-
in schedule. The petitions and supporting comments pointed out that
there are significant differences between the final rule requirements
and those in the NPRM, as well as differences between the final rule
and a European regulation on minimum vehicle sound, that will force
manufacturers to make changes to prospective vehicle designs. Even if a
manufacturer had already incorporated NPRM specifications into future
vehicle designs, more design lead time still is needed to accommodate
final rule requirements. They also discussed the specific language used
in the PSEA regarding phase-in of compliance and indicated they believe
the PSEA requires NHTSA to provide an additional year of lead time
before manufacturers must achieve full compliance with the standard.
In consideration of these petitions and supporting documents, the
agency recognizes that hybrid and electric vehicle product cycles that
are in process for model years 2019 and 2020 may already be beyond the
point where they could fully meet the final rule's compliance phase-in
schedule.
Thus, the agency has decided to grant the petitions from Alliance/
Global and Honda with respect to extending the lead-time for compliance
with the final rule. In this document, we are specifying new compliance
dates which delay by one full year the date in the final rule by which
a fifty percent phase-in must be achieved (revised to September 1,
2019) and the deadline date for full compliance of all vehicles subject
to the requirements of the safety standard (revised to September 1,
2020). We also are making conforming changes to the dates in the Part
585 Phase-in Reporting requirements as amended by the December 14,
2016, final rule.
Changes to Sameness Requirements
The automakers that petitioned NHTSA stated that vehicles of the
same model can have significant differences that might affect their
sound output. For example, Honda pointed out that a two-door and four-
door car can have the same make/model designation. Vehicles of the same
model designation also might have different powertrains and bodywork
such as grille design and body cladding, which have the potential to
influence both the emitted sound and the air-generated sound when the
vehicle is in motion. The agency recognizes that, because of these
differences, it is not accurate in all instances to consider all
vehicles of the same make/model to be the same for the purposes of the
FMVSS No. 141 requirement.
Where the PSEA required ``the same sound or set of sounds for all
vehicles of the same make and model,'' it was left up to NHTSA to
interpret how ``model'' should be defined for the purpose of regulating
similarity of the pedestrian alert sound. The agency therefore has
decided to grant the Alliance/Global and Honda petitions with respect
to this part of the ``Sameness'' requirement. We are amending the final
rule so that alert sounds can vary across different vehicle trim levels
in addition to varying by make, model, and model year as provided in
the final rule.
We note that the term ``trim level'' was suggested in the Alliance/
Global petition as the criterion that should be used to distinguish
vehicles for the purpose of the FMVSS No. 141 Sameness requirements.
Honda meanwhile suggested using the term ``series.'' ``Trim level'' is
not a term that is defined in NHTSA regulations, while the term
``series'' is defined in Part 565.12. However, according to another
definition in Part 565.12, specifically the definition of ``model,'' a
series is not considered a subset of a model, as it would appear Honda
assumed it is. Therefore, we believe that the term ``series'' is not
appropriate to use in this instance. We thus are modifying the
regulatory text to account for different trim levels, but not
``series.'' We believe amending the requirement in this way is the best
approach for identifying groups of vehicles that are required to have
the same pedestrian alert sound. This also will provide the added
flexibility in the Sameness requirement that manufacturers are seeking,
and it is responsive to both the Alliance/Global and Honda requests on
this issue.
The second change we are making to the Sameness requirements is to
limit the criteria listed in paragraph S5.1.2 for verifying compliance.
As requested by Alliance/Global, we are simplifying the listed criteria
so that the digital sound file and the sound processing algorithms will
be the only specific criteria that are required to be the same from one
specimen test vehicle to another. The automakers stated that other
Sameness criteria listed in the final rule, such as component part
numbers, are hardware-
[[Page 8184]]
based criteria that should be excluded. One reason is that the PSEA
statutory language allowed for ``reasonable manufacturing tolerances.''
They also stated that requiring hardware-based Sameness would
unnecessarily impede competitive sourcing of components, a practice by
which automakers source components from different suppliers such that
the components may have dissimilar part numbers even though they are
built to the same OEM specification and have the same performance.
Alliance/Global also cited a legal precedent under which NHTSA
regulations generally must avoid being design-restrictive except when
there is a valid safety justification.
Modify Requirement for Alteration of OEM Alert Sound
NHTSA has decided to grant Alliance/Global's request to amend the
language in paragraph S8 of the final rule prohibiting the alteration
of the alert sound originally equipped on a vehicle at the time of
production. Alliance/Global and Honda state that this prohibition is
unnecessarily restrictive and does not allow for ``reasonable
manufacturing tolerance'' as required by the PSEA. Furthermore, they
are concerned the final rule could prohibit vehicle repairs and recall
remedies when hardware components such as an electronic control unit or
body control module, which may by design be shared between the alert
system and other vehicle systems, needs to be replaced.
Although the agency is uncertain that the existing final rule
language which prohibits altering the alert sound originally equipped
on a production vehicle would impede any vehicle repairs or remedies,
we are adopting this change to clarify the existing language because it
was not the agency's intention to hinder vehicle repairs or recall
remedies.
Reduce the Crossover Speed to 20 km/h
NHTSA is denying Nissan's request to reduce the crossover speed
from 30 km/h (18.6 mph) to 20 km/h (12.4 mph). Nissan's petition stated
that NHTSA had not specifically addressed their NPRM comment regarding
this issue. The Nissan petition did not provide new information or data
on crossover speed that NHTSA had not considered when developing the
final rule.
NHTSA notes that the final rule did specifically address a JASIC
study and test data which was the basis of the Nissan NPRM comment.
More importantly, NHTSA included a new analysis in the final rule to
address comments, including Nissan's, about the need to evaluate
crossover speed using detectability criteria rather than by other
methods. The new analysis in the final rule used the Volpe detection
model which previously had been used to develop the final rule's
acoustic specifications. In this new analysis, data from a selection of
internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles in coast down mode (engine
off to simulate an EV or HV in electric mode) was analyzed using the
Volpe model to determine whether the vehicle noise at each test speed
(10, 20, and 30 km/h) had reached a detectable level. NHTSA's
conclusion about this new detection-based analysis was that it did not
support lowering the crossover speed to 20 km/h. Since this analysis
was based on detection rather than comparisons to other vehicles, we
believe it was responsive to the Nissan NPRM comments on crossover
speed. Given that fact and the absence of new data in Nissan's
petition, NHTSA has no basis to revise our previous conclusion about
crossover speed.
The agency also notes that the final rule contained other
concessions that indirectly address manufacturer concerns about
crossover speed. In the final rule, in addition to reducing the
required number of bands from the proposed number of eight bands, all
required minimum sound levels for each operating speed were reduced by
4 dB to offset potential measurement variation. By virtue of this
across-the-board reduction, the required sound levels at 30 km/h in the
final rule are close to the proposed levels for 20 km/h in the NPRM for
this rulemaking.
Lastly, we note that safety organizations, particularly the
National Federation of the Blind, have expressed their support of the
30 km/h crossover speed and have not agreed that lowering it to 20 km/h
is acceptable.
The agency's position continues to be that lowering the crossover
speed from the 30 km/h level, contained in both the NPRM and final
rule, is not warranted by the available information, and we are denying
the Nissan petition request on this issue.
Allow Driver-Selectable Alert Sounds
NHTSA has decided to seek comment on Alliance/Global's request to
allow hybrid and electric vehicles to be equipped with multiple,
driver-selectable alert sounds before granting or denying this request.
Amending the requirements to allow multiple sounds per vehicle would be
a substantial change to the final rule. Because NHTSA did not solicit
or receive comment on the number of driver-selectable sounds that
should be allowed if NHTSA were to allow them, we believe it is
appropriate to seek public comment before determining whether to grant
this request. Therefore, in accordance with normal rulemaking
administrative procedures, NHTSA tentatively plans to issue a separate
document, which would provide an opportunity for public comment on this
particular issue.
Technical Issues and Clarifications in the Honda and Nissan Petitions
In addition to requesting specific changes to requirements in the
final rule, the petitions raised technical issues relating to the
acoustic specifications and test procedures and also asked for
clarification on specific language in the final rule. These technical
issues are summarized here and fully addressed later in this document.
Technical issues raised in Nissan's petition included two items:
First was a request to allow the use of adjacent instead of only non-
adjacent one-third octave bands for compliance; and second was a
request to set the minimum band sum requirements for the 2-band
compliance option to be equal to the corresponding overall SPLs of the
4-band compliance option. We note that, while Nissan phrased these two
issues as petition requests, we are treating them as technical
clarifications because the final rule preamble included substantial
explanation of the agency's rationale for specifying non-adjacent bands
for compliance as well as the agency's methodology for selecting the
band sum levels for the 2-band compliance option, and we do not believe
that the information presented in Nissan's petition invalidates the
agency's previous analysis, as explained later in this document. After
giving these two technical requests from Nissan due consideration, the
agency is not making any changes to the acoustic specifications in
response to these requests.
Honda's petition requested the following technical clarifications:
Whether a vehicle can switch between 2-band and 4-band compliance at
the different test speeds; which bands should be selected for
compliance when the highest band levels above and below 1000 Hz are in
adjacent rather than non-adjacent bands; and how to calculate the
average of overall SPL values (section S7.1.4). Also, Honda requested
that indoor testing be an option available for manufacturer
certification in addition to outdoor testing.
In reviewing the regulatory text of the December 2016 final rule to
address Honda's petition, NHTSA identified
[[Page 8185]]
several inconsistencies and minor errors in section S7 of the
regulatory text. Because the agency already was making a number of text
changes to S7 to respond to Honda, NHTSA has taken this opportunity to
correct and clarify the text as needed to resolve those inconsistencies
and errors.
Comment About Availability of Documents Incorporated by Reference
A submission to the docket from Publicresource.org was concerned
with the public availability of technical documents that were
incorporated by reference into the final rule. The documents in
question are industry technical standards including an SAE recommended
practice (in two versions), an ISO standard (in three versions), and an
ANSI standard. Publicresource.org stated that various parties and
members of the public that may have some interest in the rule would not
have adequate access to these reference documents. This might include
consumer protection groups, small manufacturers, hobbyists, and
students. Publicresource.org did not specify why they believe
availability would be limited or lacking, whether that would be due to
cost of the documents or some other reason. The agency's position is
that the subject reference documents for FMVSS No. 141 are available in
the same manner as reference documents for any other FMVSS. For this
rulemaking, the agency followed the same practice for handling
reference documents as it always follows, as set forth in Section VI,
Regulatory Notices and Analyses, in the final rule, as well as in the
corresponding section at the end of this document.
II. Background
NHTSA's involvement with the safety of quiet hybrid and electric
vehicles and their impact on pedestrian safety goes back at least a
decade to when the agency began monitoring efforts by various outside
groups on this issue. In 2008 the agency held a public meeting on the
safety of quiet vehicles and, the following year, initiated a
statistical study of relevant pedestrian crashes and began researching
the acoustical aspects of the safety problem.
In January 2011, the U.S. Congress enacted legislation, the
Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act of 2010 (PSEA), which directed NHTSA
to undertake rulemaking to create a new safety standard to require
hybrid and electric vehicles to have a minimum sound level in order to
help pedestrians, especially those with impaired eyesight, to detect
those vehicles.
In accordance with the PSEA, NHTSA issued an NPRM \3\ on January
14, 2013, and a final rule \4\ on December 14, 2016, establishing FMVSS
No. 141, ``Minimum Sound Requirements for Hybrid and Electric
Vehicles.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 78 FR 2797.
\4\ 81 FR 90416.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NHTSA's conducted a statistical crash data study, as cited in the
final rule,\5\ which found that the pedestrian crash rate of hybrid
vehicles was 1.18 times greater than that of conventional ICE vehicles.
The agency's Final Regulatory Impact Assessment is available in the
docket \6\ with some proprietary information redacted. Also, the
benefits of the final rule are summarized in section V-A \7\ of the
final rule preamble, and the costs are summarized in section V-B.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ NHTSA Traffic Safety Facts--Research Note, Wu, J., Feb.
2017, ``Updated Analysis of Pedestrian and Pedalcyclist Crashes with
Hybrid Vehicles'' available at https://crashstats.nhtsa.dot.gov/Api/Public/ViewPublication/812371.
\6\ See docket NHTSA-2016-0125-0011 at www.regulations.gov.
\7\ 81 FR 90505.
\8\ 81 FR 90507.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NHTSA also completed an Environmental Assessment \9\ of the
potential for increase in ambient noise levels in urban and non-urban
environments in the U.S. which would result from a federal regulation
setting minimum sound levels for hybrid and electric vehicles. The
Environmental Assessment estimated that there will be only minimal
impact in one type of non-urban scenario, and the overall environmental
noise increase from the safety standard for HVs and EVs was found to be
negligible.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See docket NHTSA-2016-0125-0009 at www.regulations.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
Pursuant to the Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act, NHTSA issued a
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) \10\ in January 2013 to create a
new FMVSS setting minimum sound level requirements for low-speed
operation of hybrid and electric light vehicles.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 78 FR 2798.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NPRM proposed a crossover speed of 30 km/h (18.6 mph) because
at that speed, based on NHTSA tests that used a ``peer vehicle''
comparison methodology, tire noise, wind resistance, and other noises
from the vehicle eliminated the need for added alert sounds. In the
agency's tests, the sound levels of a selection of electric and hybrid
vehicles were evaluated and compared to the sound levels of vehicles
having the same or similar make, model, and body type but operating
with internal combustion engines (ICEs). For example, the sound level
of a hybrid Toyota Camry in electric mode in a pass-by test at 20 km/h
was directly compared to the sound level of a conventional gas-engine
Toyota Camry of the same model year at the same pass-by speed of 20 km/
h.
The NPRM specified an outdoor compliance test procedure based on
the September 2011 version of SAE J2889-1. The compliance procedure
included tests for stationary, reverse, and pass-by measurements
conducted at 10 km/h (6.2 mph), 20 km/h (12.4 mph), and 30 km/h (18.6
mph). We explained in the NPRM that NHTSA believed that outdoor pass-by
testing is preferable to indoor testing in hemi-anechoic chambers using
chassis dynamometers because outdoor testing is more representative of
the real-world interactions between pedestrians and vehicles. We also
expressed concern that specifications for indoor testing were not fully
developed and did not have a known level of objectivity, repeatability,
and reproducibility for testing minimum vehicle sound at low speeds.
The NPRM proposed a Sameness requirement in order to ensure that
hybrid and electric vehicles of the same make and model emit the same
sound, as directed by the PSEA. The NPRM proposed that vehicles of the
same make, model, and model year must emit the same level of sound
within 3 dB(A) in each one-third octave band from 160 Hz to 5000 Hz.
B. Final Rule
As noted, the final rule was published on December 14, 2016, and
established FMVSS No. 141 which applies to electric and hybrid-electric
passenger cars, MPVs, light trucks, and buses with a GVWR of 10,000
pounds or less and to low speed vehicles (LSVs). The standard applies
to these vehicles if they can be operated in an electric mode in the
test conditions covered by the standard, without an any internal
combustion engine (ICE) operation. The final rule requires hybrid and
electric vehicles to emit sound at minimum levels while the vehicle is
stationary (although not when the vehicle is parked, i.e., when the
transmission is in ``park''), while in reverse, and while the vehicle
is in forward motion up to 30 km/h. It also adopted the agency's
proposal to conduct compliance testing outdoors.
In the final rule, the agency reduced the number of one-third
octave bands for which vehicles must meet minimum sound pressure level
requirements. The NPRM proposed that vehicles would
[[Page 8186]]
have to emit sound meeting minimum requirements in eight one-third
octave bands. In the final rule, hybrid and electric vehicles will
instead have to meet a requirement based on sound level in either two
or four one-third octave bands at the vehicle manufacturer's option,
and a vehicle may alternate between meeting the 2-band and 4-band
specifications depending on test speed. Vehicles complying with the 4-
band option must meet minimum sound pressure levels in any four non-
adjacent one-third octave bands between 315 Hz and 5000 Hz, including
the one-third octave bands between 630 Hz and 1600 Hz (these bands were
excluded in the NPRM). Vehicles complying with the 2-band option must
meet minimum sound pressure levels in two non-adjacent one-third octave
bands between 315 Hz and 3150 Hz, with one band below 1000 Hz and the
other band at or above 1000 Hz. The two bands used to meet the 2-band
option also must meet a minimum band sum level.
Under the 4-band compliance option, the minimum sound levels for
each band are slightly lower than the values proposed in the NPRM, and
the overall sound pressure of sounds meeting the 4-band option will be
similar to those meeting the proposed eight-band requirements in the
NPRM. Under the 2-band compliance option, the minimum sound
requirements for each band are lower than those of the proposed eight-
band requirements for the low and mid frequency bands (315 Hz through
3,150 Hz; the 4,000 Hz and 5,000 Hz bands are not included for the
purpose of determining compliance with the 2-band requirement.) Neither
the 4-band compliance option nor the 2-band compliance option include
requirements for tones or broadband content that were contained in the
NPRM.
For both the 2-band and 4-band compliance options, the final rule
expands the range of acceptable one-third octave bands to include those
between 630 Hz and 1600 Hz (these bands were excluded in the NPRM). It
also reflects an across-the-board reduction in the minimum levels of 4
dB(A) to account for measurement variability which the agency's
development of test procedures indicated was needed.
Reducing the number and minimum levels of required one-third octave
bands while expanding the number of useable bands in the final rule
provided additional flexibility to manufacturers for designing
pedestrian alert systems while preserving the goal of pedestrian alert
sounds that are detectable in various ambient environments.
Regarding Sameness, NHTSA revised the criteria for determining that
the sound produced by two HVs or EVs of the same make, model, and model
year is the same. The agency determined that the NPRM requirement for
the sound produced by two specimen vehicles to be within three dB(A) in
every one-third octave band between 315 Hz and 5000 Hz was technically
not feasible. The final rule instead requires that HVs and EVs of the
same make, model, and model year emit the same sound by specifying that
those vehicles use the same alert system hardware and software,
including specific items such as the same digital sound file to produce
sound used to meet the minimum sound requirements. The final rule
listed several other criteria including part numbers of alert system
components that may be evaluated to verify compliance with the Sameness
requirement.
The final rule made numerous improvements to the proposed test
procedures in response to comments that were received on the NPRM.
With regard to the phase-in schedule for the safety standard, the
NPRM proposed a phase-in schedule for manufacturers of HVs and EVs,
with 30 percent of the HVs and EVs they produce required to comply
three years before the date for full compliance established in the
PSEA, 60 percent required to comply two years before the full-
compliance date, and 90 percent required to comply one year before the
full-compliance date. To respond to comments on that proposal, the
final rule simplified the phase-in schedule by shortening it to include
a single year of phase-in, rather than three years. This simplification
provides somewhat more lead-time and responds to vehicle manufacturers'
comments that the proposed phase-in was unnecessarily complex.
Under the final rule, half of each manufacturer's HV and EV
production would have been required to comply with the final rule by
September 1, 2018, and 100 percent by September 1, 2019. The phase-in
does not apply to multi-stage and small volume manufacturers; all of
their HV and EV production would have been required to comply with the
final rule by September 1, 2019.
III. Petitions for Reconsideration Received by NHTSA
In response to the published final rule on Minimum Sound
Requirements for Hybrid and Electric Vehicles, NHTSA received timely
petitions for reconsideration (submitted by the January 30, 2017,
deadline) from three sources: The Auto Alliance in conjunction with
Global Automakers \11\ (Alliance/Global); Nissan North America,
Inc.\12\ (Nissan); and American Honda Motor Company, Inc.\13\ (Honda).
Alliance/Global \14\ also submitted a supplemental letter in support of
their petition. In addition, General Motors Corp, Inc., submitted a
letter providing support on one of the issues raised by Alliance/Global
and Honda. (The GM letter contained proprietary information, so it has
not been released to the docket.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See docket NHTSA-2016-0125-0012.
\12\ See docket NHTSA-2016-0125-0013.
\13\ See docket NHTSA-2016-0125-0014.
\14\ See docket NHTSA-2016-0125-0016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These petitions requested several changes covering several aspects
of the final rule. NHTSA identified the following six discrete requests
for changes to specific requirements (listed here in the approximate
order they appear in the Alliance/Global, Honda, and Nissan petitions):
1. To delay by one year both the compliance phase-in date and the
date by which all vehicle production must comply with the rule (section
S9);
2. To consolidate the compliance criteria for the Sameness
requirement (section S5.5.2) to include only the digital sound file and
digital processing algorithm;
3. To modify the Sameness requirement (S5.5.1) to allow alert
sounds to vary by trim level or model series rather than just by make/
model;
4. To modify section S8, which prohibits altering the factory-
equipped alert sound, so as not to impede vehicle repairs when
components of the alert system are shared with other vehicle systems;
5. To lower the crossover speed from 30 km/h (18.6 mph) to 20 km/h
(12.4 mph);
6. To modify the Sameness requirement so that a vehicle can be
equipped with a suite of up to five driver-selectable alert sounds.
In addition to these specific requests for amendments to the final
rule, some of the petitions included requests for technical
clarifications. Nissan's submission included two such requests, one
concerning the minimum sound levels for 2-band and 4-band
specifications, and the other regarding allowing adjacent bands for
compliance. Similarly, Honda's submission pointed out a few technical
clarifications they believe are needed, involving the intended use of
2-band and 4-band compliance options, the correct method
[[Page 8187]]
of data selection and calculation for certain steps in the sound
evaluation process, and the option of using indoor testing.
Lastly, NHTSA received one additional docket comment, from
PublicResourse.org,\15\ that the agency has decided to address in this
document. This comment was in regard to the availability to the public
of technical reference documents, specifically several industry
standards from SAE, ISO, and ANSI, that were incorporated by reference
in the final rule. This docket submission in discussed in more detail
below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See docket NHTSA-2016-0125-0004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Alliance/Global Petition for Reconsideration and Letters of Support
The Alliance/Global petition addressed requirements for: Compliance
phase-in schedule; equipping HVs and EVs with driver-selectable sounds;
applying Sameness to each ``trim level'' rather than each model;
limiting the Sameness compliance criteria to the digital sound file and
digital algorithm; and removing any prohibition on altering vehicle
components that may be shared between the alert system and other
vehicle systems.
Regarding the phase-in schedule, in addition to discussing design
and manufacturing considerations that would make the final rule
schedule unfeasible, Alliance/Global's petition pointed out that
NHTSA's interpretation of the PSEA language regarding compliance dates
appeared to have changed between the NPRM and the final rule. The
petition argued that the earlier interpretation was the correct one and
that, under that interpretation, the agency is required to provide an
additional year of lead-time before full compliance is required.
Alliance/Global submitted a supplementary letter which provided
further detail on the phase-in schedule and the issue of driver-
selectable sounds. On the phase-in, the supplemental submission
discussed specific final rule requirements that had changed since the
NPRM. It also noted several areas where the final rule is different
from the UN Regulation No. 138. In their supplementary submission,
Alliance/Global also indicated that, if a set of driver-selectable
sounds was permitted, manufacturers would limit the number to no more
than five different sounds per make, model, model year, and trim level
of vehicle.
A letter in support of the Alliance/Global petition submitted by GM
(submitted under a request for confidentiality) addressed the issue of
phase-in schedule. This letter stated, ``While GM supports NHTSA's
effort to create minimum sound requirements for electric and hybrid
vehicles, the final rule contains a number of additional technical
challenges that will require substantial redesigns to GM's existing
systems.'' GM's letter also stated, ``The twenty-month phase-in
provided by the final rule is far less than the normal timing required
to develop, validate, and certify new systems.'' GM cited the final
rule's volume shift requirement, different frequency range, and several
design changes that will be needed in the sound generating systems that
GM already has been installing in its electric and hybrid production
vehicles. The GM letter cited specific hardware changes, upgrades, and
replacements that their current alert systems need to be compliant with
FMVSS No. 141.
Most recently, on August 4, 2017, the Alliance of Automobile
Manufacturers (the Alliance), the Association of Global Automakers
(Global) and the National Federation of the Blind (NFB) wrote the
Deputy Secretary of the Department of Transportation requesting that
the December 2016 final rule be permitted to come into effect on
September 5, 2017. The letter also requested that by September 5, 2017,
NHTSA amend the compliance date of the December 2016 final rule to
delay the phase-in and full compliance dates by one year and by
November 6, 2017, respond to the remaining technical issues in the
pending petitions for reconsideration.
B. Honda Petition for Reconsideration
Honda's petition included two specific petition requests, one
regarding the phase-in schedule, and the other regarding allowance for
alert sounds to vary from vehicle to vehicle according to model
``series'' as well as make, model, and model year. The remainder of
Honda's submission was concerned with technical clarifications and
comments on the rule. Honda asked if it is acceptable under the 2-band
and 4-band compliance specifications for a vehicle to switch back and
forth between the two specifications at the different speed conditions
of the test procedure. Honda also asked NHTSA to clarify section
S7.1.6(e)(i) of the test procedure, noting that there could be a
conflict when choosing the two highest band levels while also choosing
only non-adjacent bands for the compliance evaluation. In addition,
Honda asked NHTSA to clarify the calculation method for averaging
overall SPLs in section 7.1.4(c) of the test procedure.
Lastly, Honda stated that indoor testing should be optional for
FMVSS No. 141 compliance evaluations and is preferable because of the
better stability and the efficiency of indoor sound measurements, and
also because, from a harmonization standpoint, that would better align
the safety standard with UN Regulation No. 138 which permits indoor
measurements.
C. Nissan Petition for Reconsideration
Nissan submitted a cover letter and technical slides in which they
requested that NHTSA reconsider its decision in the final rule on the
crossover speed, which the agency set at 30 km/h (18.6 mph). Nissan
stated that they believe the crossover speed should be set at 20 km/h,
and cited a previous comment \16\ that Nissan had submitted to the
docket in May 2014 in response to the agency's NPRM and which
summarized a JASIC study related to crossover speed. Nissan stated that
NHTSA did not address this comment in the final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See docket NHTSA-2011-0148-0326.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nissan's petition also raised two technical issues. The first was a
request that NHTSA allow the use of adjacent instead of only non-
adjacent one-third octave bands for compliance. The second issue was a
request to set the minimum band sum requirements for the 2-band
compliance option to be equal to the minimum overall SPLs for the 4-
band compliance option. Although these two issues raised by Nissan ask
the agency to reconsider specific requirements of the final rule and
request specific changes, we believe these two issues were addressed in
the discussion of NHTSA's acoustic research in the final rule preamble.
Thus, we have decided it is appropriate to treat these issues as
technical clarifications.
D. Other Issues
A comment from Publicresource.org expressed concern with public
availability of technical documents that were incorporated by reference
into the final rule. The documents in question are industry technical
standards including an SAE recommended practice (in two versions), an
ISO standard (in three versions), and an ANSI standard.
Publicresource.org stated that various parties such as consumer
protection groups, small manufacturers, hobbyists, and students would
not have adequate access to these reference documents.
Publicresource.org did not specify why that would be the case, i.e.,
whether it is due to the cost of the documents when purchased from
their respective technical organizations, or some other reason.
[[Page 8188]]
IV. Agency Response and Decision
As outlined in the previous section of this document, the petitions
requested a number of changes covering several aspects of the final
rule. NHTSA identified six discrete requests for changes to specific
requirements. As stated previously, to facilitate responding to the
petitions, the agency is treating each of the six issues as separate
requests and addressing each request individually below.
After considering all information provided by petitioners, NHTSA is
granting four of the requested actions, denying one request (on
crossover speed), and for the last item (on driver-selectable sounds),
the agency has decided that it will be necessary to request public
comment before deciding how to respond to that request, and NHTSA
intends to issue a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) or other
Federal Register document on that issue.
In regard to the four petition requests that the agency is
granting, we are amending the final rule to implement the following
changes:
Amend Section S9, Phase-In Schedule, to add exactly one
year to each of the dates listed in subsections S9.1, S9.1(a), S9.1(b),
and S9.2.
Amend Section S5.5, Sameness requirement, subsection
S5.5.1, to allow alert sounds to vary across different trim levels, and
also amend Section S4, Definitions, to add a new definition for ``trim
level.''
Amend Section S5.5, Sameness requirement, subsection
S5.5.2, to limit the criteria listed in the final rule to be used for
verifying compliance with the Sameness requirement so that the digital
sound file and the sound processing algorithm are the only criteria
that are required to be the same. Other criteria, particularly part
numbers of hardware components, would not be listed in the regulatory
text.
Amend Section S8, Prohibition on altering the sound of a
vehicle subject to this standard, to clarify that the rule does not
prohibit vehicle repairs unrelated to the alert system in the case of
replacement of hardware components shared between the alert system and
other vehicle systems, i.e., a body control module.
These amendments to the final rule and the agency's reasons for
adopting them are further discussed below. In general, we believe these
changes to the final rule are worthwhile refinements that will clarify
the requirements, provide more flexibility to vehicle manufacturers,
and remove potential barriers to achieving compliance, while having no
foreseeable impact on the safety benefits estimated in the December
2016 final rule, as this rule simply corrects an error in the original
final rule related to the phase-in schedule and does not make changes
that affect the substance of the required alert sound.
Our decision to deny one request, as well as the agency's intent to
seek comment on one issue, also are discussed in detail below. In
addition, we address some technical issues raised and other comments
relating to the final rule.
A. Phase-In Schedule, Compliance Dates, and Lead Time
The agency has decided to grant the petitions from Alliance/Global
and Honda with respect to extending the lead-time for compliance by
extending the phase-in date and the full compliance date by one year.
NHTSA is also addressing supplemental submissions from Alliance/Global
and General Motors Corporation (GM) that provided information on the
lead time issue.
After further consideration, we agree with the petitioners that the
interpretation of the PSEA phase-in requirements provided by the agency
in the NPRM is the correct interpretation and that delaying the full
compliance date until September 1, 2020 is required by that
interpretation. The PSEA states that, ``The motor vehicle safety
standard . . . shall establish a phase-in period for compliance, as
determined by the Secretary, and shall require full compliance . . . on
or after September 1 of the calendar year that begins 3 years after the
date on which the final rule is issued.'' In the NPRM, the agency had
stated that the appropriate timeframe should be the calendar year
beginning 36 months after the rule was issued, such that, if a rule
were issued anytime in 2016, the 36-month period after the date of
publication of the final rule would end sometime in 2019. Thus, the
first calendar year that would begin after that date in 2019 would be
calendar year 2020, meaning that full compliance should be by September
1, 2020. The agency believes that its interpretation from the NPRM
continues to be the correct interpretation of the PSEA. In fact, upon
review, the agency did not actually change this interpretation in the
Final Rule, as the phase-in schedule and economic analysis were based
on the assumption that the rule would be published in 2015, rather than
2016, which is what actually occurred. The agency now corrects this
error.
Further, NHTSA agrees that, because of vehicle product cycles, it
would be difficult for manufacturers to make the design modifications
necessary for vehicles subject to FMVSS No. 141 to meet the current
final rule phase-in schedule and full compliance date, especially in
light of the significant changes from the NPRM and the uncertainty
surrounding the issues raised in the petitions for reconsideration.
In the Final Rule, the agency estimated that the economic impact of
the rule for MY 2020 vehicles was $42M to $41.5M in costs and $320M to
$247.5M in benefits at the 3 percent and 7 percent discount rates.
However, in light of the issues raised in the petitions and the more
recent letter from the Alliance, Global, and NFB, the agency believes
that the analysis in the final rule may likely have understated the
initial costs to comply with the rule. More specifically, the analysis
was based on a less aggressive phase-in schedule and as such, does not
support a 100 percent compliance date of September 1, 2019. In fact,
comments received indicate that the more accelerated phase-in schedule
than what the agency had intended is not technically possible, which
calls in to question the relationship between benefits and costs
presented in the Final Rule. By delaying the compliance date by one
year, the economic impacts of the rule will more closely mirror those
presented in support of the Final Rule.
In this document, we are specifying new compliance dates which
delay by one full year both corresponding dates in the final rule,
i.e., the date by which a fifty percent phase-in must be achieved and
also the deadline date for full compliance of all vehicles subject to
the requirements of the safety standard. Under the amended one-year
phase-in, half of vehicles produced in model year 2020 must be
compliant, as follows:
Fifty percent of each manufacturer's total production of
hybrid and electric vehicles, subject to the applicability of FMVSS No.
141 and produced on and after September 1, 2019, and before September
1, 2020, shall comply with the safety standard;
OR, at the manufacturer's option: 50 percent of each manufacturer's
average annual production of hybrid and electric vehicles subject to
the applicability of FMVSS No. 141 and produced on and after September
1, 2016, and before September 1, 2019, shall comply with the safety
standard.
Immediately following the one-year phase-in, starting with model
year 2021, all hybrid and electric vehicles are required to comply, as
follows:
100 percent of each manufacturer's production of hybrid
and electric
[[Page 8189]]
vehicles subject to the applicability of FMVSS No. 141 and produced on
and after September 1, 2020, shall comply with the safety standard.
In making these changes to the compliance schedule, we believe this
will afford manufacturers the additional flexibility and lead time
needed to accommodate customary vehicle design cycles, thus addressing
the schedule concerns expressed in their petitions.
As a consequence of the revised phase-in schedule, it is necessary
to make conforming adjustments to the Part 585 reporting requirements
in order to align them with the new phase-in period. The conforming
changes to Part 585 are detailed below.
Phase-In Reporting
When a new safety regulation is phased in over a period of time,
NHTSA requires manufacturers to submit production data so the agency
can track and verify adherence to the phase-in schedule. Part 585 of
Title 49 of the CFR contains the requirements for Phase-in Reporting
for various FMVSS. To implement the one-year, 50-percent phase-in for
FMVSS No. 141, the December 2016 final rule included amendments to Part
585, appending new Subpart N, to provide for tracking of production
data so that the agency can verify that the requisite minimum
percentage of vehicles are in compliance during the phase-in.
As a result of the amended phase-in schedule contained in this
document, we are making corresponding adjustments to the phase-in
reporting dates of Part 585, Subpart N, as amended in the December 14,
2016, final rule. This entails adding one year to the due dates in the
following paragraphs of Part 585, Subpart N: Sec. 585.130
`Applicability'; Sec. 585.132 `Response to Inquiries'; Sec. 585.133
`Reporting Requirements'; and Sec. 585.130 `Records.' These revisions
appear in the regulatory text at the end of this document.
B. Sameness Requirement for Same Make, Model, Model Year Vehicles
The petitions from Alliance/Global and Honda requested that NHTSA
amend section S5.5.1 of the Sameness requirement in the final rule
regulatory text. That section required all vehicles of the same make,
model, and model year to use the same pedestrian alert sound system and
be designed to have the same sound. This requirement originated from
the PSEA which stipulated that the safety standard ``shall require
manufacturers to provide, within reasonable manufacturing tolerances,
the same sound or set of sounds for all vehicles of the same make and
model. . . .''
The automakers stated that vehicles of the same model can have
significant differences unrelated to the alert sound system that might
affect their sound output. For example, Honda pointed out that a two-
door and four-door car can have the same model designation. Vehicles of
the same model designation also might have different powertrains and
bodywork such as grille design and body cladding, which have the
potential to influence both emitted sound and the air-generated sound
when the vehicle is in motion.
Alliance/Global requested that NHTSA add the term ``trim level'' to
``make, model, and model year'' in S5.5.1 so that vehicles of the same
make/model would be required to have the same sound only if the
vehicles also have the same trim level designation. This would give
manufacturers flexibility to allow the alert sound to vary among
vehicles that, while having the same make/model designation, may
nevertheless be physically different in significant ways. Honda made a
similar request but, instead of the term ``trim level,'' Honda
requested using the term ``series.''
The agency recognizes that, because of the possibility of
physically significant differences between vehicles within a model
line, it is not practical to consider all vehicles of the same make/
model to be the same for the purposes of the pedestrian alert sound.
The agency therefore has decided to grant the Alliance/Global and Honda
petitions with respect to this aspect of the ``Sameness'' requirement.
We are amending the final rule so that alert sounds can vary across
different vehicle trim levels and also by vehicle body type, in
addition to varying by make, model, and model year as provided in the
final rule.
For the revised requirement, ``body type'' is added and is used as
defined in 49 CFR 565.12(b) which states, ``Body type means the general
configuration or shape of a vehicle distinguished by such
characteristics as the number of doors or windows, cargo-carrying
features and the roofline (e.g., sedan, fastback, hatchback).''
The request on this issue in Alliance/Global petition used the term
``trim level'' as the designation criterion that would distinguish
vehicles for the purpose of Sameness requirements in FMVSS No. 141,
while Honda suggested using the term ``series.'' We note that ``trim
level'' is not a term that is defined anywhere in NHTSA regulations,
while the term ``series'' is defined in Part 565.12.\17\ However, it
also should be noted that, per the definition of ``model'' also
included in Part 565.12, a ``series'' would not be considered a subset
of a model. On the contrary, a ``model'' as defined in Part 565.12 is a
subset of a ``series.'' Therefore, the agency believes based on the
existing definitions that ``series'' does not reflect a subdivision of
a model line, as Honda seems to have intended. On the other hand, we
believe the term ``trim level'' is widely understood to denote a subset
of a model, which is what the petitioners seek to achieve according to
the information they provided on this issue. Therefore, we are
modifying the regulatory text to account for different trim level
designations, without reference to or use of the term ``series.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See 49 CFR 565.12, Definitions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For this revised requirement, ``trim level'' is defined to mean a
subset of vehicles within the same model designation and with the same
body type which are alike in their general level of standard equipment,
such as a ``base'' trim level of a vehicle model. Other trim levels
within a model might include a ``sport'' version or ``luxury'' version.
These depend on the trim designations that are used by different
manufacturers. Generally, different trim levels comprise no more than a
few different versions of a given model. For the purposes of FMVSS No.
141, minor differences including different wheel rim styles or merely
being equipped with a sunroof should not be considered to constitute
different trim levels. Trim levels should be considered to be different
only if they represent vehicle differences that are likely to alter
vehicle-emitted sound. We are including a definition of ``trim level''
in section S4 of the regulatory text to reflect this.
We believe relaxing the final rule in this manner will adequately
distinguish between groups of vehicles that, based on their physical
similarity, can reasonably be required to have the same pedestrian
alert sound. This change will provide the added flexibility in meeting
the Sameness requirement that the manufacturers are seeking. At the
same time, this change is acceptable from a regulatory standpoint given
that the agency's understanding of the PSEA language was to allow for
variation of alert sounds across different groups of vehicles so long
as vehicles that are the same in most other respects would have the
same alert sound. As pointed out by petitioners, vehicles of the same
model might not be the same in many respects, but vehicles of the same
trim level would be the same.
[[Page 8190]]
The regulatory text of sections S4 and S5.5.1 amended per the above
discussion appears at the end of this document.
C. Criteria for Sameness of Production Vehicles
The petitions from Alliance/Global and Honda raised concerns about
the wording in S5.5.2 of the Sameness requirement. Paragraph S5.5.2
states that a ``pedestrian alert system'' includes all hardware and
software components that are used to generate the alert sound. That
section goes on to specifically list the types of vehicle components,
including both hardware and software, that comprise a pedestrian alert
system and that must be the same on any two vehicles of the same make,
model, and model year. Among the listed items that must be the same are
``alert system hardware components including speakers, speaker modules,
and control modules, as evidenced by specific details such as part
numbers and technical illustrations.''
The petitioners believe that this requirement is overly design-
restrictive. In particular, they are concerned that requiring part
numbers to be the same is not feasible. Alliance/Global stated, ``The
regulatory text as written places part-number specific restrictions on
a vast number of components and as a result creates a major impediment
for manufacturing.'' They also state, ``OEMs may choose to source
components from more than one vendor, and requiring the use of the
`same' hardware and software may preclude that competitive process.''
They go on to say that the final rule is inconsistent with the Vehicle
Safety Act stipulation that each FMVSS must permit a manufacturer to
select any technology that can meet the performance requirements.
Similarly, Honda's petition stated that, in cases where a shared
component such as an ECU that serves multiple vehicle functions is
modified during a model year due to changes in vehicle systems other
than the alert system, ``the ECU part number would change, thus causing
a violation of the Sameness requirement.''
The agency has decided to amend the Sameness requirements as
requested to limit the criteria listed in the final rule for verifying
compliance so that the digital sound file and the sound processing
algorithm will be the only criteria that are required to be the same
from one specimen test vehicle to another. The petitioners stated that
other Sameness criteria listed in the final rule are hardware-based
criteria, such as component part numbers, and should not be included
because it appears to disregard the statutory requirement to allow
``reasonable manufacturing tolerances.'' Also, requiring hardware-based
Sameness would unnecessarily impede competitive sourcing of components
and related vehicle manufacturing and assembly practices. For example,
automakers may source a component from different suppliers, such that
the components have dissimilar part numbers even though they are built
to the same OEM specification and have the same performance. Alliance/
Global also cited a legal precedent under which NHTSA regulations
generally must avoid being design-restrictive except when there is a
valid safety justification.
To implement the amendment described above, the agency is adopting
new language based largely on that suggested by Alliance/Global. The
revisions to paragraph S5.5.2 acknowledge two types of design of a
digital sound-generating system. In simple terms, one type uses a
digitally coded source, such as a digitally recorded sound file, which
is processed by a controller program and played back through the
speaker system. Another type creates the sound without a source file
using programmed algorithms that generates the signal that is played
back through the speaker system.
D. Alteration of the OEM Alert Sound
Section S8 of the final rule has the heading ``Prohibition on
altering the sound of a vehicle subject to this standard.'' This
requirement is unchanged from what the agency proposed in the NPRM, and
it originated from a PSEA requirement stating that the safety standard
must ``prohibit manufacturers from providing any mechanism for anyone
other than the manufacturer or the dealer to disable, alter, replace,
or modify the sound'' except to remedy a noncompliance or defect.
NHTSA's interpretation of the purpose of this requirement in the
PSEA was to prevent access to vehicle features which control the alert
sound system so that it could not be modified, adjusted, or reprogramed
in a way that would change the emitted sound or render it noncompliant.
In other words, the alert system needs to be tamper-resistant to some
extent. For example, a vehicle's owner-accessible setup menus should
not include a setting that disables the alert system.
The Alliance/Global expressed concern with NHTSA's wording of this
requirement in the final rule. They stated, ``An OEM may decide to
install a body controller or other component that may not be dedicated
solely to FMVSS 141 compliance, but which is installed--in part--to
comply with FMVSS 141. The PSEA does not preclude actions to repair
such a body controller for reasons unrelated to FMVSS 141, yet the
final rule appears to preclude such repairs.'' They also state that the
requirement in the final rule exceeds the authority granted by the
PSEA. Alliance's/Global's petition contained suggested edits to the
regulatory text that would remove the potential conflict in the
regulatory text.
Alliance/Global also stated that the final rule was unnecessarily
restrictive on this issue, and it did not allow for ``reasonable
manufacturing tolerance'' as stipulated in the PSEA. Furthermore, they
along with Honda are concerned the final rule could prohibit vehicle
repairs or create other obstacles to vehicle updates when components
such as an electronic control unit or body control module are shared
between the alert system and other vehicle systems.
We have decided to grant the request to modify the final rule with
respect to this issue. Although the agency is uncertain that the
existing final rule language in section S8 actually would impede any
vehicle repair or upgrade, we are adopting this change because the
language should be clear, and because it was not the agency's intention
to hinder any vehicle repair or remedy unrelated to the pedestrian
alert system.
The amended text we are adopting is that suggested by Alliance/
Global. The revisions appear in the amended text of section S8 at the
end of this document.
E. Crossover Speed
Nissan's petition request to lower the crossover speed revisits the
issues raised in Nissan's comments to the NPRM. Nissan stated that
NHTSA did not specifically address their May 19, 2014 submission to the
NPRM docket on crossover speed. Nissan's petition for reconsideration
did not provide any new information or data that was not already
considered by the agency when developing the final rule.
NHTSA notes that the final rule specifically addressed a JASIC
study \18\ and test data which was the basis of Nissan's submission.
More importantly, NHTSA included a new analysis in the final rule to
address comments, including Nissan's, about the need to evaluate
crossover speed using detectability criteria rather than by other
methods. (Those other methods included comparisons of ICE sound levels
with the engine on and engine off, referred to as the ``coast down''
method; and also, comparisons of the sound
[[Page 8191]]
level of EVs or HVs to identical or similar ICE vehicles, called the
``peer vehicle'' method.) For the final rule, NHTSA added a new
detectability analysis for crossover speed using the Volpe detection
model \19\ which had been used to develop the final rule's acoustic
specifications. In this new analysis, data from a selection of ICE
vehicles in coast down mode (engine off to simulate EVs and HVs in
electric mode) was analyzed by the Volpe model to determine whether the
vehicle noise at each test speed (10, 20, and 30 km/h) had reached a
detectable level. NHTSA's conclusion from this new detection-based
analysis, which we included in the final rule preamble to respond to
comments, was that it did not support lowering the crossover speed to
20 km/h (12.4 mph). Furthermore, since this analysis was based on the
detection model rather than comparisons between vehicles, it provides a
more useful means of identifying the speed at which added sound is no
longer needed than peer vehicle and coast down comparisons.\20\ As
Nissan's petition cited their previous comment based on the existing
JASIC study rather than providing new information, NHTSA has no basis
to revise our previous conclusion about crossover speed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ See 81 FR 90447.
\19\ Hastings, et al. Detectability of Alert Signals for Hybrid
and Electric Vehicles: Acoustic Modeling and Human Subjects
Experiment. (2015) Washington, DC: DOT/NHTSA; available at
www.regulations.gov, Docket NHTSA-2016-0125-0010.
\20\ The PSEA defines ``crossover speed'' as the speed at which
tire noise, wind resistance, or other factors eliminate the need for
a separate alert sound. Because NHTSA's detection model attempts to
determine when a vehicle would be detectable to pedestrians based on
the sound from tire noise, wind resistance, and other factors that
may be present, NHTSA contends that the detection model is the
method for determining crossover speed most consistent with the
language of the PSEA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The agency also notes that the final rule contained concessions
that indirectly address manufacturer concerns about crossover speed. In
the final rule, the minimum number of required one-third octave band
components was reduced from the proposed number of eight bands. In
addition, all of the required minimum sound levels for each operating
speed were reduced by 4 dB to offset potential measurement variation.
By virtue of these changes to the acoustic specifications, the overall
level of sounds meeting the final rule acoustic requirements at 30 km/h
(60 to 64 dB(A) for the 4-band option) is very similar to the overall
level of sounds meeting the NPRM's proposed 8-band requirements at 20
km/h (approx. 62 dB(A)).
For all the reasons stated above, the agency's position continues
to be that lowering the crossover speed from the 30 km/h level
contained in both the NPRM and final rule is not warranted, and we are
denying the Nissan petition request on this issue.
F. Technical Clarifications in the Nissan and Honda Petitions
Nissan Technical Issues
Nissan's petition raised two technical issues in addition to the
petition request on crossover speed addressed above. First was a
request to allow the use of adjacent instead of only non-adjacent one-
third octave bands for compliance; and second was a request to set the
minimum band sum requirements at each test speed for the 2-band
compliance option to be equal to the corresponding overall SPLs of the
4-band compliance option.
After considering these two technical requests from Nissan, the
agency is not making any changes to the acoustic specifications related
to these issues. We note that, while Nissan phrased these two issues as
petition requests, we are treating them as technical clarifications
because Nissan's petition did not directly respond to or acknowledge
the discussion and explanation in the final rule preamble as to the
agency's rationale for specifying non-adjacent bands for compliance and
the agency's methodology for selecting the band sum levels for the 2-
band compliance option. The preamble included a lengthy discussion of
detectability research the agency conducted after the NPRM had been
published.
On the first issue, the question of adjacency of bands, Nissan
cited a Zwicker loudness model that, according to Nissan, shows a
frequency band will mask an adjacent band when the sound level
difference between the two bands reaches 6 dB or more (in one-third
octave band frequencies). Nissan pointed out that the difference from
any band to an adjacent one in the final rule's required minimum levels
is less than 4 dB for all of the bands included.
Our response to this is that the masking data cited by Nissan
applies to the masking of a component at the center of its one-third
octave band. If the masker is shifted toward the signal, while still in
its own one-third octave band, masking can take place at levels
significantly less than 6 dB.
Although it may be possible, depending on the ambient, to achieve
detectability using adjacent bands, there still would be greater
susceptibility to the combined masking effects due to adjacent
components and the ambient that are enough to make a barely perceptible
component not perceptible. This phenomenon appears to have influenced
results of NHTSA's validation study \21\ in which alert signals with
non-adjacent bands were detected more consistently (in a standardized
55 dB(A) ambient) than signals with only adjacent bands.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Hastings, et al. Detectability of Alert Signals for Hybrid
and Electric Vehicles: Acoustic Modeling and Human Subjects
Experiment. (2015) Washington, DC: DOT/NHTSA; available at
www.regulations.gov, Docket NHTSA-2016-0125-0010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NHTSA also is concerned that an acoustic specification allowing
adjacent one-third octave bands is vulnerable to poor design practice,
in that a single tone placed at the cut-off frequency of a one third
octave band could be credited for two bands (one on either side of the
cut-off, with a level in both bands about 3 dB lower than the tone). A
signal like this, though it might technically meet a 2-band criterion
with adjacent bands allowed, would disregard NHTSA's findings about the
importance of spreading signal components across a wide frequency range
to create robust sounds detectable in a variety of ambient sound
profiles.
For these reasons, we do not agree with Nissan that adjacent bands
should be allowed in the 2-band and the 4-band compliance requirements
of the FMVSS No. 141 final rule. Furthermore, specifying non-adjacent
bands imposes only a minor limitation on alert sound design, and we did
not find any reason given in Nissan's submission why this requirement
is unreasonable, impractical, or burdensome to an extent that it should
be deleted. Therefore, the agency has decided not to amend the final
rule with respect to the non-adjacency issue raised in Nissan's
petition.
Regarding the second technical issue in Nissan's petition, they
requested that the band sums at each test speed for the 2-band
compliance option should be set equal to the overall SPL levels for the
4-band compliance option. In response, we first point out that the
agency's reasons for specifying higher band sums when using the 2-band
option are discussed in the preamble of the December 2016 final
rule.\22\ In that discussion, the agency noted that the 2-band
specifications were optimized so that allowable 2-band signals would
achieve a degree of robustness (i.e., detectability in a wide range of
ambients normalized to a 55 dB(A)) equivalent to that achieved by
compliant 4-band signals. To maintain robustness, it was
[[Page 8192]]
necessary to set the band sum levels high enough to compensate for the
reduced number of bands. Without this optimization, the agency would
not have been able to accommodate NPRM comments calling for a 2-band
approach.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See final rule at 81 FR 90461 to 90463.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In comparing the 2-band and 4-band options, robustness is achieved
for the latter by requiring acoustic energy at threshold levels in a
minimum of four bands and specifying that these four bands span a
minimum of nine one-third octave bands. The idea is that for an ambient
of 55 dB(A), either the masking components would match those used for
determining thresholds or masking components would tend not to spread
across a wide range of nine one-third octave bands. Thus, there is a
high likelihood with a 4-band alert signal that some portion of the
vehicle's sound will be detectable in an ambient that is 55 dB(A) or
lower so that it can be heard by pedestrians. The 2-band option has
fewer bands and thus fewer opportunities to have a signal coincide with
an advantageous ambient level. Instead, it achieves robustness by
requiring a greater overall level (higher band sum) from the two bands
(one below 800 Hz and one at or above 1000 Hz) that have the most
acoustical energy. There is a fundamental tradeoff between loudness
versus sound bandwidth when comparing the 2-band and 4-band options.
In summary, NHTSA believes that the approach taken in the final
rule for setting the band sum levels for the 2-band option is
reasonable and justifiable, and Nissan's petition did not include any
research or other information that would persuade the agency to take a
different approach. Therefore, we are not making the requested change
to the final rule.
Honda Technical Issues
Honda made several comments in its petition about technical
clarifications they believe are needed in the final rule. The first
issue was whether a vehicle can switch between 2-band and 4-band
compliance at the different test speeds.
The answer is `yes', it is acceptable to switch between compliance
with the 2-band and 4-band options for different test conditions
(stationary, reverse, 10 km/h, 20 km/h, and 30 km/h). In any test to
verify compliance with FMVSS No. 141, the measured sound of a vehicle
at each test condition would be checked for compliance with both the 2-
band and 4-band requirements. For example, sound measurements of a
vehicle in a 10 km/h pass-by test would be evaluated relative to both
the 2-band and 4-band specifications, and the vehicle could achieve
compliance by meeting one or both specifications. At 20 km/h, the
evaluation of both the 2-band and 4-band specifications would be
repeated independent of which specification was complied with at 10 km/
h, and the vehicle could again comply with one or both specifications.
As long as the measured sound at a given test speed meets at least one
of the two optional specifications, then it would comply for the
particular test speed.
Regarding evaluating the relative volume change requirement (S5.4)
for vehicles that switch between 2-band and 4-band compliance, we note
that relative volume change is based on a band sum of the whole range
of 13 bands in the measured sound at each test condition, calculated
per S7.6 of the test procedure. Because the criterion is the band sum
of all the bands, relative volume change evaluation does not depend on
which of the two minimum sound level options, 2-band or 4-band, is
complied with in each test condition, and there is no conflict if a
vehicle switches between the two specifications for different test
conditions.
Another technical clarification requested by Honda was in regard to
section S7.1.6(e) of the December 2016 final rule. That section of the
test procedure specifies which one-third octave bands should be
selected for compliance evaluations under the 2-band compliance option.
The requirement states that the two bands with the highest levels, one
below 1000 Hz and the other at or above 1000 Hz, should be selected.
Honda said that it is unclear which bands should be selected in the
event that the two bands with the highest levels are adjacent, i.e., if
they are specifically the 800 Hz and 1000 Hz bands.
NHTSA recognizes this discrepancy and agrees that some
clarification is needed. The intent of the final rule was that the two
one-third octave bands (one below and one at or above 1000 Hz) with the
highest SPLs that are, at the same time, non-adjacent would be
selected, but the text does not specify what happens if the two bands
with the highest SPLs are adjacent. In that case, to maintain non-
adjacency, another band having the next-largest SPL would have to be
substituted for either the 800 Hz or 1000 Hz band. This substitution
involves at least two permutations of band selection. In one
permutation, the 800 Hz band would be selected along with the band
above 1000 Hz with the second-largest SPL of the bands at or above 1000
Hz. In the other permutation, the 1000 Hz band would be selected along
with the band below 800 Hz with the second-largest SPL of the bands at
or below 800 Hz. Both combination of two bands selected according to
these restrictions are then evaluated according to S7.1.6(e)(ii) and at
least one must comply with the applicable requirements in section S5 of
the Standard.
To make this clear, we are revising the regulatory text of
paragraph S7.1.6(e)(i) in a manner similar to what Honda suggested.
As a consequence of Honda's request to clarify this language, the
agency identified two additional places in the regulatory text--in
paragraphs S7.1.5(e) and in S7.3.5(e)--where it is necessary to insert
similar amended text because those two paragraphs are analogous to
S7.1.6(e), that is, all three of these paragraphs address an equivalent
step in the procedure, with the only difference being the test speed.
In the two additional paragraphs, S7.1.5(e) and S7.3.5(e), we also note
that some of the text that was of concern to Honda in S7.1.6(e) was
inadvertently omitted from the final rule. Specifically, those two
paragraphs should have included the sentence, ``One band shall be below
1000 Hz and one band shall be at or greater than 1000 Hz.''
To clarify the text and accurately state the procedural step for
selection of bands to be evaluated for compliance with the 2-band
option, the agency is revising S7.1.5(e) and S7.3.5(e) using the same
amended text as for S7.1.6(e), described above, except with different
paragraph references within the text, as appropriate. The amended text
for these two paragraphs is included at the end of this document.
In addition to the above text clarifications and corrections, in
section S7.1.5(e) of the December 2016 final rule, text applying to
one-third octave band selection for the 4-band compliance option, but
not for the 2-band compliance option was included. The iterative
process to select a combination of four bands to be used to evaluate
compliance does not apply for the 2-band option. Therefore, the agency
is deleting that sentence from three sections of the test procedure
where it is not relevant. The amended text appears at the end of this
document.
Lastly, in making the above text changes, the agency identified a
few minor mistakes and inconsistencies in the wording of related
requirements. In sub-paragraphs S7.1.5(d)(ii) and S7.1.5(e)(ii), the
words ``of this paragraph'' are unnecessary because the exact paragraph
reference numbers are included in the text. Furthermore, the phrase
``of this paragraph'' could lead to a misunderstanding as it is not
entirely
[[Page 8193]]
clear what ``this paragraph'' refers to. Thus, we are deleting the
phrase ``of this paragraph'' in both places. Additionally, in
S7.1.5(e)(ii) and in S7.1.6(d)(ii), where reference is made to
paragraph ``(c)'' without further specificity, we are replacing ``(c)''
with the full paragraph numbers, ``S7.1.5(c)'' and ``S7.1.6(c)''
respectively, to avoid any misunderstanding and to be consistent with
the wording used in related sections of the test procedure. Also, to
enhance S7.2, procedure for testing in Reverse, we are adding the
sentence, ``The minimum sound level requirements for the Reverse test
condition are contained in S5.1.2, Table 2, for 4-band compliance and
in S5.2, Table 6, for 2-band compliance.''
Similarly, to enhance S7.4 for pass-by tests above 20 km/h up to 30
km/h and S7.5 for pass-by tests at 30 km/h, we are adding an analogous
statement to clarify which S5 requirements apply at those test speeds.
In addition to this edit, we are re-wording S7.4 to more clearly
express the pass-by speeds that may be tested. Finally, we are re-
wording and adding an additional sentence to S7.3.6 so that pass-by
test speeds above zero up to 10 km/h are explicitly included and to
include specific reference to the appropriate requirement tables in S5
for both the zero to 10 km/h pass-by speed range and the greater than
10 km/h up to 20 km/h pass-by speed range.
NHTSA is making these technical changes in section S7 as part of
the amendments in this document to respond to Honda's request and to
correct inconsistencies and minor errors in the regulatory text. All
technical changes and corrections discussed above appear in the amended
regulatory text at the end of this document.
Another technical question in Honda's petition was how to correctly
calculate the average of the overall SPL values in section S7.1.4 of
the test procedure. The answer to Honda's question is that a linear
average is taken, which is the sum of the SPL values divided by four.
The result is rounded to a tenth of a decibel, as specified in the test
procedure. We also point out, as discussed in more detail in the
following paragraph, that NHTSA intends to provide a computer program
for compliance evaluation that will automatically execute all necessary
calculations including averaging overall SPLs for S7.1.4(c).
As a general response to Honda's comments, we note that the agency
has been developing a ``NHTSA Compliance Tool'' for FMVSS No. 141,
which is a programmed, computer-based application to facilitate
compliance testing. As discussed in the final rule preamble,\23\ NHTSA
intends to make this tool available publicly so that OEMs, test labs,
suppliers, and others will have access to and full use of this tool,
similar to what the agency did for FMVSS No. 126, Electronic Stability
Control. This compliance tool will include a user interface that will
prompt for test data input and will automatically evaluate vehicle
compliance based on the input. All test data processing steps and
calculations in section S7 of the safety standard are built-in to the
tool. For example, with respect to Honda's technical questions, the
tool will execute the band selection and calculate averages needed to
verify compliance with the 2-band and 4-band specifications at each
test speed, as well as compliance with the volume change requirements.
The tool will evaluate all possible band combinations, such that if the
situation regarding S7.1.6(e) cited by Honda were to arise, the tool
would evaluate all combinations of the two highest non-adjacent bands
above and below 1000 Hz.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See 81 FR 90501.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The last technical issue raised in Honda's petition was about
indoor testing. Honda stated that indoor testing should be optional,
and it is preferable for certification of vehicles to FMVSS No. 141.
Honda also stated that indoor testing is accommodated in the European
regulation, United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Regulation
(UN ECE) No. 138, Uniform Provisions Concerning the Approval of Quiet
Road Transport Vehicles with Regards to Their Reduced Audibility. Honda
cited factors such as Doppler shift that influence outdoor testing, and
stated that indoor testing has better stability and efficiency for
sound measurement.
In response to this, the agency points out that the preamble of the
December 2016 final rule addressed indoor testing \24\ because this
topic was raised in several NPRM comments. The agency acknowledged some
advantages of indoor testing in hemi-anechoic chambers but also pointed
out several reasons why outdoor testing on an ISO-compatible test pad
is preferable, and concluded that the agency intends to conduct its own
compliance tests using outdoor facilities. Importantly, with regard to
Honda's indoor testing comment in their petition, the agency notes that
the absence of a specific test procedure for indoor testing in the
final rule does not mean indoor testing is prohibited. On the contrary,
vehicle manufacturers, suppliers, and others have the discretion to
conduct FMVSS No. 141 certification tests indoors as long as they can
certify that a vehicle fully complies with the Safety Standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See 81 FR 90481.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
G. Other Comments Relevant to the Final Rule
The comment from Publicresource.org expressed concern with public
availability of technical documents that were incorporated by reference
into the final rule. However, their docket submission did not specify
any particular reasons that they believe various parties such as
consumer protection groups, small manufacturers, hobbyists, and
students would not have adequate access to these reference documents.
Thus, NHTSA is not able to provide a response to more adequately
address any concerns they might have. Given that the subject documents
from SAE, ISO, and ANSI are copyrighted material, the agency followed
its normal practice in making them publicly available, which includes
keeping a printed copy of each of the reference documents on hand at
NHTSA headquarters. Printed copies of the referenced documents are also
available at the National Archives and Records Administration. The
public availability of documents incorporated by reference was
discussed in Section VI of the December 14, 2016, final rule.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See 81 FR 90513.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Response to Petitions for Reconsideration
Pursuant to the process established under 49 CFR part 553.37, after
carefully considering all aspects of the petition, except for the
request regarding driver selectable sounds, NHTSA has decided to grant
the petitions discussed above without further proceedings.
VI. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
Executive Order 12866, Executive Order 13563, and DOT Regulatory
Policies and Procedures
Executive Order 12866, Executive Order 13563, and the Department of
Transportation's regulatory policies require this agency to make
determinations as to whether a regulatory action is ``significant'' and
therefore subject to OMB review and the requirements of the
aforementioned Executive Orders. The Executive Order 12866 defines a
``significant regulatory action'' as one that is likely to result in a
rule that may:
(1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or
adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the
economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public
health or safety, or
[[Page 8194]]
State, local, or Tribal governments or communities;
(2) Create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an
action taken or planned by another agency;
(3) Materially alter the budgetary impact of entitlements, grants,
user fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or
(4) Raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles set forth in
the Executive Order.
We have considered the potential impact of this final rule under
Executive Order 12866, Executive Order 13563, and the Department of
Transportation's regulatory policies and procedures and have determined
that today's final rule is not significant for any of the
aforementioned reasons. This final rule only makes minor adjustments to
the existing requirements of FMVSS No. 141. We are adjusting the phase-
in schedule and its reporting requirements to give manufacturers
additional time to comply with the requirements of the final rule. We
are also making several minor amendments to the rule to clarify the
rule's requirements. We thus anticipate that the economic impacts of
this final rule will be limited.
Executive Order 13771
Executive Order 13771 titled ``Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs,'' directs that, unless prohibited by law, whenever an
executive department or agency publicly proposes for notice and comment
or otherwise promulgates a new regulation, it shall identify at least
two existing regulations to be repealed. In addition, any new
incremental costs associated with new regulations shall, to the extent
permitted by law, be offset by the elimination of existing costs. Only
those rules deemed significant under section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866, ``Regulatory Planning and Review,'' are subject to these
requirements. As discussed above, this rule is not a significant rule
under Executive Order 12866 and, accordingly, is not subject to the
offset requirements of 13771.
NHTSA has determined that this rulemaking is a deregulatory action
under E.O. 13771, as it imposes no costs and, instead, amends FMVSS No.
141 to give manufacturers of hybrid and electric vehicles greater
flexibility during the manufacturing process and when sourcing parts
that comprise the alert sound system. This final rule also provides
flexibility to manufacturers by allowing them to differentiate hybrid
and electric vehicles of different trim levels within a vehicle model
by allowing vehicles of different trim levels to produce different
sounds. This final rule also amends FMVSS No. 141 to delay the date by
which manufacturers are required to fully comply with the requirements
of the standard by one year.
Delaying the compliance date of FMVSS No. 141 for one year will
result in a cost savings to manufacturers of hybrid and electric
vehicles to which the standard applies of $21M to $20.75M for MY 2019
and $21M to $20.75M75 for MY 2020 at the three and seven percent
discount rates, respectively. These cost savings will accrue because
manufacturers of hybrid and electric vehicles to which the standard
applies will not have to comply with the phase-in requirements of the
standard until September 1, 2019 and will not have to fully comply with
the standard's requirements until September 1, 2020. NHTSA contends
that these cost savings estimates are conservative and that the true
cost savings of the rule are likely to be higher because, as discussed
above, the cost benefit analysis accompanying the December 2016 final
rule assumed a longer compliance lead time and did not account for
costs that may have been necessary to comply with the rule in a shorter
time period.
Executive Order 13609: Promoting International Regulatory Cooperation
The policy statement in section 1 of Executive Order 13609
provides, in part:
The regulatory approaches taken by foreign governments may
differ from those taken by U.S. regulatory agencies to address
similar issues. In some cases, the differences between the
regulatory approaches of U.S. agencies and those of their foreign
counterparts might not be necessary and might impair the ability of
American businesses to export and compete internationally. In
meeting shared challenges involving health, safety, labor, security,
environmental, and other issues, international regulatory
cooperation can identify approaches that are at least as protective
as those that are or would be adopted in the absence of such
cooperation. International regulatory cooperation can also reduce,
eliminate, or prevent unnecessary differences in regulatory
requirements.
In the preamble to the December 2016 final rule we discussed the
reasons for the differences in the regulatory approach taken by foreign
governments that have addressed this issue. As stated above, we are
declining to adopt a test procedure for indoor testing included in UN
ECE Reg. No. 138. NHTSA's test procedures are not requirements that
manufacturers must follow when certifying vehicles to the FMVSS and
manufacturers are free to choose whatever certification method they
wish as long as the manufacturer can demonstrate a good faith basis for
certification.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,
as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
(SBREFA) of 1996), whenever an agency is required to publish a notice
of proposed rulemaking or final rule, it must prepare and make
available for public comment a regulatory flexibility analysis that
describes the effect of the rule on small entities (i.e., small
businesses, small organizations, and small governmental jurisdictions).
The Small Business Administration's regulations at 13 CFR part 121
define a small business, in part, as a business entity ``which operates
primarily within the United States.'' (13 CFR 121.105(a)). No
regulatory flexibility analysis is required if the head of an agency
certifies the proposal will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. SBREFA amended the Regulatory
Flexibility Act to require Federal agencies to provide a statement of
the factual basis for certifying that a proposal will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
I hereby certify that this rule would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. This final
rule does not make any significant changes to the existing FMVSS No.
141. Instead, this rule aligns the phase-in requirements with
manufacturers' design and production cycles, and makes other minor
adjustments to specific regulatory text to facilitate manufacturer
compliance with the new FMVSS No. 141. It also clarifies some technical
requirements and test procedures. The final requirements as amended in
this document afford more lead time, and somewhat greater clarity and
flexibility to vehicle manufacturers while maintaining the safety goals
and benefits of the enabling statute, the PSEA, under which FMVSS No.
141 was created.
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
NHTSA has examined today's final rule pursuant to Executive Order
13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999) and concluded that no additional
consultation with States, local governments or their representatives is
mandated beyond the rulemaking process. The agency has concluded that
the rulemaking would not have sufficient federalism implications to
warrant consultation with State and local officials or the preparation
of a
[[Page 8195]]
federalism summary impact statement. Today's final rule does not have
``substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between
the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.''
NHTSA rules can have preemptive effect in two ways. First, the
National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act contains an express
preemption provision:
When a motor vehicle safety standard is in effect under this
chapter, a State or a political subdivision of a State may prescribe
or continue in effect a standard applicable to the same aspect of
performance of a motor vehicle or motor vehicle equipment only if
the standard is identical to the standard prescribed under this
chapter. 49 U.S.C. 30103(b)(1).
It is this statutory command by Congress that preempts any non-
identical State legislative and administrative law addressing the same
aspect of performance.
The express preemption provision described above is subject to a
savings clause under which ``[c]ompliance with a motor vehicle safety
standard prescribed under this chapter does not exempt a person from
liability at common law.'' 49 U.S.C. 30103(e). Pursuant to this
provision, State common law tort causes of action against motor vehicle
manufacturers that might otherwise be preempted by the express
preemption provision are generally preserved. However, the Supreme
Court has recognized the possibility, in some instances, of implied
preemption of State common law tort causes of action by virtue of
NHTSA's rules--even if not expressly preempted.
This second way that NHTSA rules can preempt is dependent upon the
existence of an actual conflict between an FMVSS and the higher
standard that would effectively be imposed on motor vehicle
manufacturers if someone obtained a State common law tort judgment
against the manufacturer--notwithstanding the manufacturer's compliance
with the NHTSA standard. Because most NHTSA standards established by an
FMVSS are minimum standards, a State common law tort cause of action
that seeks to impose a higher standard on motor vehicle manufacturers
will generally not be preempted. However, if and when such a conflict
does exist--for example, when the standard at issue is both a minimum
and a maximum standard--the State common law tort cause of action is
impliedly preempted. See Geier v. American Honda Motor Co., 529 U.S.
861 (2000).
Pursuant to Executive Order 13132, NHTSA has considered whether
this rule could or should preempt State common law causes of action.
The agency's ability to announce its conclusion regarding the
preemptive effect of one of its rules reduces the likelihood that
preemption will be an issue in any subsequent tort litigation.
To this end, the agency has examined the nature (e.g., the language
and structure of the regulatory text) and objectives of today's final
rule and finds that this rule, like many NHTSA rules, prescribes only a
minimum safety standard. Accordingly, NHTSA does not intend that this
final rule preempt state tort law that would effectively impose a
higher standard on motor vehicle manufacturers than that established by
today's final rule. Establishment of a higher standard by means of
State tort law would not conflict with the minimum standard established
in this document. Without any conflict, there could not be any implied
preemption of a State common law tort cause of action.
NHTSA solicited comments from the States and other interested
parties on this assessment of issues relevant to E.O. 13132 in the
NPRM. However, we did not receive any comments with regard to this
issue.
Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
When promulgating a regulation, Executive Order 12988 specifically
requires that the agency must make every reasonable effort to ensure
that the regulation, as appropriate: (1) Specifies in clear language
the preemptive effect; (2) specifies in clear language the effect on
existing Federal law or regulation, including all provisions repealed,
circumscribed, displaced, impaired, or modified; (3) provides a clear
legal standard for affected conduct rather than a general standard,
while promoting simplification and burden reduction; (4) specifies in
clear language the retroactive effect; (5) specifies whether
administrative proceedings are to be required before parties may file
suit in court; (6) explicitly or implicitly defines key terms; and (7)
addresses other important issues affecting clarity and general
draftsmanship of regulations.
Pursuant to this Order, NHTSA notes as follows. The preemptive
effect of this final rule is discussed above in connection with
Executive Order 13132. NHTSA notes further that there is no requirement
that individuals submit a petition for reconsideration or pursue other
administrative proceeding before they may file suit in court.
Executive Order 13045 (Protection of Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks)
Executive Order 13045, ``Protection of Children from Environmental
Health and Safety Risks,'' (62 FR 19885; April 23, 1997) applies to any
proposed or final rule that: (1) Is determined to be ``economically
significant,'' as defined in Executive Order 12866, and (2) concerns an
environmental health or safety risk that NHTSA has reason to believe
may have a disproportionate effect on children. If a rule meets both
criteria, the agency must evaluate the environmental health or safety
effects of the rule on children, and explain why the rule is preferable
to other potentially effective and reasonably feasible alternatives
considered by the agency. This final rule is not subject to Executive
Order 13045 because it is not economically significant.
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
Under the National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
(NTTAA) (Pub. L. 104-113), ``all Federal agencies and departments shall
use technical standards that are developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies, using such technical standards as a means
to carry out policy objectives or activities determined by the agencies
and departments.'' Voluntary consensus standards are technical
standards (e.g., materials specifications, test methods, sampling
procedures, and business practices) that are developed or adopted by
voluntary consensus standards bodies, such as the Society of Automotive
Engineers (SAE). The NTTAA directs us to provide Congress, through OMB,
explanations when we decide not to use available and applicable
voluntary consensus standards.
Pursuant to the above requirements, the agency conducted a review
of voluntary consensus standards to determine if any were applicable to
this final rule. For the specific provisions that we are adjusting in
this rule, there were no applicable consensus standards.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires agencies to
prepare a written assessment of the costs, benefits, and other effects
of proposed or final rules that include a Federal mandate likely to
result in the expenditure by State, local, or tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
[[Page 8196]]
more than $100 million annually (adjusted for inflation with base year
of 1995). We note that as this final rule only makes minor adjustments
and clarifications to FMVSS No. 141. Thus, it would not result in
expenditures by any of the aforementioned entities of over $100 million
annually.
National Environmental Policy Act
NHTSA has analyzed this rulemaking action for the purposes of the
National Environmental Policy Act. The agency has determined that
implementation of this action would not have any significant impact on
the quality of the human environment. NHTSA has also determined that
the changes in this final rule would not change the findings in the
Final Environmental Assessment prepared in connection with the final
rule.\26\
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\26\ The Final EA is available in Docket No. NHTSA-2011-0100 at
https://www.regulations.gov.
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Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), a person is not
required to respond to a collection of information by a Federal agency
unless the collection displays a valid OMB control number. While this
final rule adjusts the timing of the phase-in reporting requirements to
match the manufacturer's production year (i.e., to align the
requirement with other potential phase-in reports that the manufacturer
may need to produce), it includes no new collection of information
because the actual reporting requirements are the same as the
requirements in the April 2014 final rule.
Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
The Department of Transportation assigns a regulation identifier
number (RIN) to each regulatory action listed in the Unified Agenda of
Federal Regulations. The Regulatory Information Service Center
publishes the Unified Agenda in April and October of each year. You may
use the RIN contained in the heading at the beginning of this document
to find this action in the Unified Agenda.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 571
Imports, Incorporation by reference, Motor vehicle safety,
Reporting and recordkeeping, Tires.
In consideration of the foregoing, NHTSA amends 49 CFR part 571 as
follows:
PART 571--FEDERAL MOTOR VEHICLE SAFETY STANDARDS
0
1. The authority citation for part 571 of title 49 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115, 30117, and 30166;
delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.95.
0
2. Amend Sec. 571.141 by adding a definition for ``trim level'' in
paragraph S4, and revising paragraphs S5.5.1, S5.5.2, S7.1, S7.1.5
introductory text, S7.1.5(d) introductory text, S7.1.5(d)(ii),
S7.1.5(e), S7.1.6 introductory text, S7.1.6(d) introductory text,
S7.1.6(d)(ii), S7.1.6(e), S7.2, S7.3.5 introductory text, S7.3.5(d)
introductory text, S7.3.5(e), and S7.3.6, S7.4, S7.5, S8, and S9 to
read as follows:
Sec. 571.141 Standard No. 141; Minimum Sound Requirements for Hybrid
and Electric Vehicles.
* * * * *
S4 * * *
``Trim level'' is defined to mean a subset of vehicles within the
same model designation with the same body type and which are alike in
their general level of standard equipment, such as a ``base'' trim
level of a vehicle model. Vehicles with only minor trim differences
that are unlikely to affect vehicle-emitted sound are not considered
different for the purposes of this safety standard.
* * * * *
S5.5 * * *
S5.5.1 Any two vehicles of the same make, model, model year, body
type, and trim level (as those terms are defined in 49 CFR 565.12 or in
section S4 of this safety standard) to which this safety standard
applies shall be designed to have the same pedestrian alert sound when
operating under the same test conditions and at the same speed
including any test conditions and speeds for which an alert sound is
required in Section S5 of this safety standard.
S5.5.2 For the purposes of this requirement, the pedestrian alert
sound of vehicles which meet the applicable requirements in S5.1
through S5.4 of this standard are deemed to be the same if the digital
source of the sound, if any, is the same and if the algorithms that
either generate the sound directly or process the digital source to
generate the sound are the same.
* * * * *
S7.1 Stationary vehicle in forward gear.
* * * * *
S7.1.5 Select one-third octave bands to be used for evaluating
compliance with detection requirements for a stationary vehicle.
* * * * *
(d) For alerts designed to meet the four-band requirements of S5.1
of this standard:
* * * * *
(ii) Compare the average corrected sound pressure level from
S7.1.5(c) in each of the four one-third octave bands selected in
paragraph S7.1.5(d)(i) to the required minimum level of the
corresponding one-third octave band specified in paragraph S5.1.1,
Table 1, to determine compliance.
(e) For alerts designed to meet the two-band requirements of S5.2
of this standard:
(i) Select the two one-third octave bands, one below 1000 Hz and
one at or above 1000 Hz, having the largest A-weighted SPL values
within the range of 315 Hz up to 3150 Hz and that are non-adjacent to
each other to evaluate according to S7.1.5(e)(ii), below. In the event
that the pair of bands with the largest SPL values are the 800 Hz and
1000 Hz bands, then select both of the following pairs to evaluate
according S7.1.5(e)(ii): The 800 Hz band along with the band having the
second-largest A-weighted SPL value from the 1000 Hz and above bands;
and, the 1000 Hz band along with the band having the second-largest A-
weighted SPL value from the 800 Hz and below bands. At least one of the
band pairs selected as specified in this paragraph shall meet the
minimum requirements when evaluated according to S7.1.5(e)(ii).
(ii) Compare the average corrected sound pressure level from
S7.1.5(c) in each of the two one-third octave bands selected in
paragraph S7.1.5(e)(i) to the required minimum level of the
corresponding one-third octave band specified in paragraph S5.2, Table
6. Also, compare the band sum of the two bands to the required minimum
band sum in Table 6.
S7.1.6 Select one-third octave bands to be used for evaluating
compliance with directivity requirements for a stationary vehicle.
* * * * *
(d) For alerts designed to meet the four-band requirements of S5.1
of this standard:
* * * * *
(ii) Compare the average corrected sound pressure level from
S7.1.6(c) in each of the four one-third octave bands selected in
paragraph S7.1.6(d)(i) to the required minimum level of the
corresponding one-third octave band specified in paragraph S5.1.1,
Table 1, to determine compliance.
[[Page 8197]]
(e) For alerts designed to meet the two-band requirements of S5.2
of this standard:
(i) Select the two one-third octave bands, one below 1000 Hz and
one at or above 1000 Hz, having the largest A-weighted SPL values
within the range of 315 Hz up to 3150 Hz and that are non-adjacent to
each other to evaluate according to S7.1.6(e)(ii), below. In the event
that the pair of bands with the largest SPL values are the 800 Hz and
1000 Hz bands, then select both of the following pairs to evaluate
according S7.1.6(e)(ii): The 800 Hz band along with the band having the
second-largest A-weighted SPL value from the 1000 Hz and above bands;
and, the 1000 Hz band along with the band having the second-largest A-
weighted SPL value from the 800 Hz and below bands. At least one of the
band pairs selected as specified in this paragraph shall meet the
minimum requirements when evaluated according to S7.1.6(e)(ii), below.
(ii) Compare the average corrected sound pressure level from
S7.1.6(c) in each of the two one-third octave bands selected in
paragraph S7.1.6(e)(i) to the required minimum level of the
corresponding one-third octave band specified in paragraph S5.2, Table
6. Also, compare the band sum of the two bands to the required minimum
band sum in Table 6.
S7.2 Stationary vehicle in reverse gear. Test the vehicle per
S7.1.1 through S7.1.5 except that the rear plane of the vehicle is
placed on the PP' line, no center microphone is used, and the vehicle's
transmission gear selector is placed in the `Reverse' position. The
minimum sound level requirements for the Reverse test condition are
contained in S5.1.2, Table 2, for four-band compliance and in S5.2,
Table 6, for two-band compliance.
* * * * *
S7.3.5 Select one-third octave bands to be used for evaluating
compliance with the constant speed pass-by requirements.
* * * * *
(d) For alerts designed to meet the four-band requirements of S5.1
of this standard:
* * * * *
(e) For alerts designed to meet the two-band requirements of S5.2
of this standard:
(i) Select the two one-third octave bands, one below 1000 Hz and
one at or above 1000 Hz, having the largest A-weighted SPL values
within the range of 315 Hz up to 3150 Hz and that are non-adjacent to
each other to evaluate according to S7.3.5(e)(ii), below. In the event
that the pair of bands with the largest SPL values are the 800 Hz and
1000 Hz bands, then select both of the following pairs to evaluate
according S7.3.5(e)(ii): The 800 Hz band along with the band having the
second-largest A-weighted SPL value from the 1000 Hz and above bands;
and, the 1000 Hz band along with the band having the second-largest A-
weighted SPL value from the 800 Hz and below bands. At least one of the
band pairs selected as specified in this paragraph shall meet the
minimum requirements when evaluated according to S7.3.5(e)(ii), below.
(ii) Compare the average corrected sound pressure level from
S7.3.5(c) in each of the two one-third octave bands selected in
paragraph S7.3.5(e)(i) to the required minimum level of the
corresponding one-third octave band specified in paragraph S5.2, Table
6. Also, compare the band sum of the two bands to the required minimum
band sum in Table 6.
S7.3.6 The procedures in S7.3.1 through S7.3.5 may be repeated for
any pass-by test speed greater than 0 km/h and less than 20 km/h. For
test speeds greater than 0 km/h and less than 10 km/h, the minimum
sound level requirements are contained in S5.1.1, Table 1, for four-
band compliance and in S5.2, Table 6, for two-band compliance. For test
speeds greater than or equal to 10 km/h and less than 20 km/h, the
minimum sound level requirements are contained in S5.1.3, Table 3, for
4-band compliance and in S5.2, Table 6, for 2-band compliance.
S7.4 Pass-by tests at speeds greater than or equal to 20 km/h and
less than 30 km/h. Repeat the procedures of S7.3 at 21 km/h 1 km/h. The procedures in S7.3 also may be repeated for any
pass-by test speed greater than 20 km/h and less than 30 km/h. For this
range of test speeds, the minimum sound level requirements are
contained in S5.1.4, Table 4, for four-band compliance and in S5.2,
Table 6, for two-band compliance.
S7.5 Pass-by tests at 30 km/h. Repeat the procedures of S7.3 at 31
km/h 1 km/h. For this test speed, the minimum sound level
requirements are contained in S5.1.5, Table 5, for four-band compliance
and in S5.2, Table 6, for two-band compliance.
* * * * *
S8 Prohibition on altering the sound of a vehicle subject to this
standard. No entity subject to the authority of the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration may:
(a) Disable, alter, replace, or modify any element of a vehicle
installed as original equipment for purposes of complying with this
Standard, except in connection with a repair of a vehicle malfunction
or to remedy a defect or non-compliance; or
(b) Provide any person with any mechanism, equipment, process, or
device intended to disable, alter, replace, or modify the sound
emitting capability of a vehicle subject to this standard, except in
connection with a repair of vehicle malfunction or to remedy a defect
or non-compliance.
S9 Phase-in schedule.
S9.1 Hybrid and Electric Vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2019, and before September 1, 2020. For hybrid and
electric vehicles to which this standard applies manufactured on and
after September 1, 2019, and before September 1, 2020, except vehicles
produced by small volume manufacturers, the quantity of hybrid and
electric vehicles complying with this safety standard shall be not less
than 50 percent of one or both of the following:
(a) A manufacturer's average annual production of hybrid and
electric vehicles on and after September 1, 2016, and before September
1, 2019;
(b) A manufacturer's total production of hybrid and electric
vehicles on and after September 1, 2019, and before September 1, 2020.
S9.2 Hybrid and Electric Vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2020. All hybrid and electric vehicles to which this
standard applies manufactured on and after September 1, 2020, shall
comply with this safety standard.
PART 585--PHASE-IN REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
0
3. The authority citation for Part 585 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115, 30117, and 30166;
delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.95
0
4. Revise Sec. 585.130 to read as follows:
Sec. 585.130 Applicability.
This subpart applies to manufacturers of hybrid and electric
passenger cars, trucks, buses, multipurpose passenger vehicles, and
low-speed vehicles subject to the phase-in requirements of Sec.
571.141, S9.1 Hybrid and Electric Vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2019, and before September 1, 2020.
0
5. Revise Sec. 585.132 to read as follows:
Sec. 585.132 Response to inquiries.
At any time during the production year ending August 31, 2019, each
manufacturer shall, upon request from the Office of Vehicle Safety
Compliance, provide information identifying the
[[Page 8198]]
vehicles (by make, model and vehicle identification number) that have
been certified as complying with the requirements of Standard No. 141,
Minimum Sound Requirements for Hybrid and Electric Vehicles (49 CFR
571.141). The manufacturer's designation of a vehicle as a certified
vehicle is irrevocable.
0
6. In Sec. 585.133, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 585.133 Reporting requirements.
(a) Phase-in reporting requirements. Within 60 days after the end
of the production year ending August 31, 2019, each manufacturer shall
submit a report to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
concerning its compliance with the requirements of Standard No. 141
Minimum Sound Requirements for Hybrid and Electric Vehicles (49 CFR
571.141) for its vehicles produced in that year. Each report shall
provide the information specified in paragraph (b) of this section and
in Sec. 585.2 of this part.
* * * * *
0
7. Revise Sec. 585.134 to read as follows:
Sec. 585.134 Records.
Each manufacturer shall maintain records of the Vehicle
Identification Number for each vehicle for which information is
reported under Sec. 585.133 until December 31, 2024.
Issued in Washington, DC, under authority delegated in 49 CFR
1.95 and 501.5.
Heidi R. King,
Deputy Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2018-03721 Filed 2-23-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-59-P