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Why do sound engineers tune engine orders instead of just making a Ferrari-like exhaust louder?

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Answer: Managed harmonic orders

Managed harmonic ordersRight. An engine note is a moving chord tied to rpm, so engineers track orders and half-orders rather than only total sound level. Some orders create sportiness or growl, while others become drone or harshness in the cabin. Tuning means choosing which frequency families get to sing and which are suppressed. The surprising part is that a quieter exhaust can feel more exciting if the right orders remain clear.

Maximum decibel outputNot quite. More decibels can impress for a second, but loudness alone quickly becomes fatigue, drone, or a legal problem. Sound-quality work separates loudness from roughness, sharpness, fluctuation, and frequency balance. Car and Driver's engine-note primer also treats timbre as a mix of dominant and higher orders. A straight pipe can be louder than a tuned sports car and still communicate less.

Only deeper bass notesAlmost, but deep bass alone is not the recipe. Low frequencies can feel muscular, yet they can also become cabin boom if the same band hangs around at one load and rpm. A tuned exhaust usually balances bass weight with cleaner upper orders so the note rises with the engine. The useful insight is that the emotional cue is the whole order pattern, not just a lower note.

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