Home / Columns / DARE TO ASK: Pump up the volume on that car

DARE TO ASK: Pump up the volume on that car

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

Why do so many young men have those loud boom radios in their cars and loud noisemakers on the exhaust pipes?

Cal N., 66, Jacksonville

Replies

It’s a way of showing they have money to spend on these things – even if they have to miss a few bills.

Jesse, 28, male, W.Va.

It’s just a way to get attention. It may show how insecure many young males are.

J.D., 62, male, Jacksonville

It’s not just men. I was in a female friend’s car and could barely hear myself think because of the booming. It’s about status, like owning the biggest mansion in a movie-star neighborhood or having the biggest army as ruler of a country.

A.S., 27, female, Idaho

With exhausts, some do it for performance. Others do it because they see how much attention people with loud trucks and cars get. It’s simple to tell who those people are: the ones with the sound so loud and obnoxious you want to kick a dog.

Brad, 19, Fargo, N.D.

Does anyone know that a bigger (yes, they are louder) exhaust equals more horsepower? This has nothing to do with age, but passion. How many 50-year-old men and women are driving Corvettes or Vipers? They share the same passion for speed as teens with imports.

Alexys, Minneapolis

You also tend to see a lot of this in the South. Most guys here don’t drive new trucks as their first vehicles, so they try to make them stand out. They grow out of it when they go to college and realize nobody does that anymore.

Candin, Yazoo, Miss.

Expert says

For many of us, our car has become an extension of our personality, says Peter MacGillivray, vice president of marketing for the Specialty Equipment Market Association. (Does this mean we at Dare to Ask are sluggish, unpredictable and messy in the back?)

“We live at a time when people personalize their cups of coffee at Starbucks, their ringtones, their TV programming. . . . It holds true for autos, too.”

While the products in the rapidly growing auto accessories market aren’t all about noise, buyers in the 16-to-24 age bracket (who now account for $4 billion in sales) make up a large chunk of those yearning to adjust the volume inside and outside of their cars, Mac- Gillivray said.

“They may want it quieter, or louder, or they may want a certain type of note from the exhaust, such as a throaty rumble.”

And though a better exhaust system can increase a car’s performance, young males aren’t above pumping up its sound for the bravado of it.

“And attracting the opposite sex, that plays a role in it, too,” MacGillivray said. “The thing is, young people have always tried to set themselves apart. And older people will always look at them and try to figure out what in the world is going on in their minds.”

Check Also

Dare to Ask: Are slippers and bare feet in public race-specific?

By Phillip J. Milano Question Why do I constantly see black people shopping in stores ...

Leave a Reply