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► Motorcycle News 2009
New SAE Motorcycle Exhaust Sound Test Standard

Text courtesy AMA.
July 8, 2009 - The Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE)
International has produced a simple, consistent and
economical sound test standard that can be used to
determine whether a street bike (on-highway motorcycle)
exhaust system emits excessive sound, the American
Motorcyclist Association (AMA) reports.
The J2825 "Measurement of Exhaust Sound Pressure
Levels of Stationary On-Highway Motorcycles," issued by
the SAE in May, establishes instrumentation, test site,
test conditions, procedures, measurements and sound
level limits. According to the SAE, the J2825
standard is based on a comprehensive study of a wide
variety of on-highway motorcycles.
"The motorcycling community and law enforcement have
long sought a practical field test for measuring street
motorcycle exhaust sound," said Ed Moreland, AMA vice
president for government relations.
"Thanks to the hard work of the Motorcycle Industry
Council, and the SAE engineers involved in the project,
for the first time a simple field test is now
available."
"The AMA maintains that few factors contribute more
to misunderstanding and prejudice against street riders
than excessively noisy motorcycles," Moreland continued.
"With the new SAE J2825 standard, street
motorcyclists can now determine how quiet, or loud,
their bikes really are."
Moreland added that the new standard follows a
template established years ago with the SAE J1287
off-highway motorcycle sound test, a standard
recommended by the AMA wherever off-highway motorcycles
are operated.
The SAE J2825 on-highway motorcycle sound test
procedure is similar to the one used for the SAE J1287
off-highway motorcycle test. The street bike
measurement requires holding a calibrated sound meter at
a 45-degree angle 20 inches from the exhaust pipe of a
running engine.
The procedure spells out how to do the test with the
bike at idle, at a predetermined engine speed ("Set RPM
Test"), or by slowly increasing the engine speed of the
bike, known as the "Swept RPM Test."
The SAE J2825 standard, prepared by the SAE
Motorcycle Technical Steering Committee, recommends a
decibel limit of 92 dBA at idle for all machines; or,
using the Set RPM or Swept RPM Test, 100 dBA for three-
or four-cylinder machines, and 96 dBA for bikes with
fewer than three or more than four cylinders.
The creation of a new street motorcycle sound
measurement procedure was a top recommendation of the
2003 National Summit on Motorcycle Sound, expressed by
its Motorcycle Sound Working Group.
The AMA organized the National Summit on Motorcycle
Sound to pull together riders and user organizations,
representatives of the motorcycle manufacturers, the
aftermarket industry, racing promoters, government
agencies, and others to develop proposals regarding the
increasingly controversial issue of excessive motorcycle
sound.
"The J2825 test allows jurisdictions around the
nation, struggling with complaints about excessive
motorcycle sound, to set reasonable limits in accordance
with the SAE standard," said Moreland.
"While the AMA supports the establishment of the SAE
J2825 standard in America's cities, towns and
communities, we will continue to fight efforts that
single out motorcycles while still permitting excessive
sound from other sources, such as loud cars and trucks,
booming car stereos, poorly maintained generators,
whining leaf blowers, and the like."
The SAE J2825 standard can be
downloaded on the SAE website for a fee.
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From "KdK" (7/09): "I'd like to say
I'm against anything that limits my freedoms so I
already have a negative opinion about this document and
AMA's support of it.
The noise my bike makes last only for seconds for
bystanders but I have to live with it for as long as I'm
on the bike. It doesn't make sense to me to have
the government tell me what I can listen to when it only
affects others for a very short amount of time. If
someone was revving their engine in a neighborhood for
30 minutes at 11 PM - maybe.
But driving by on the highway or through town to get
home? Leave me alone and let me enjoy the ride.
It isn't like Rolling Thunder is going through every
town every day.
In the article it says:
"The SAE J2825 standard, prepared
by the SAE Motorcycle Technical Steering Committee,
recommends a decibel limit of 92 dBA at idle for all
machines; or, using the Set RPM or Swept RPM Test, 100
dBA for three- or four-cylinder machines, and 96 dBA for
bikes with fewer than three or more than four
cylinders."
I don't understand why the sound level can be higher
for 3 and 4 cylinder bikes than it can be for 2 and 6
cylinder bikes. Maybe the answer is in the SAE
document but I won't pay $61.00 to read it.
This brings up another point. Can a municipality
build a law (or standards used for a law) around a
document that we have to pay to read so we understand
our (loss of) rights?
Maybe the AMA should spend a little more time working
for bikers rights instead of bikers restrictions."
Editor's Reply: Just for the
record, the article is a press release about a new
standard for testing sound levels. We have no
opinion on the politics of the topic one way or the
other at this point, it is just an article of interest.
However, by way of explanation:
It's my understanding that the AMA worked with SAE to
develop the standard because:
1) There was no standard, accepted and accurate
method to test motorcycle exhaust sound, so what was
valid in one state was not valid in another;
2) A standard test will help eliminate the
subjectivity that many state and local agencies used;
e.g., "that motorcycle sounds loud, I'm giving you a
ticket"; and
3) Because the states and localities were pushing for
legislation that might end up being more unreasonable
than motorcycle owners or the industry wanted, so it was
a proactive move to at least develop a standard and get
it out there, rather than waiting for a standard to be
legislated and implemented as a done deal without any
AMA or other motorcycle organization's support.
Regarding your question on paying for the copies of
standards: Since the SAE is a private
organization, yes, they can and do charge for copies of
this and any other standard.
In fact, almost every standards organization
throughout the world in various countries that have them
charge for copies of the actual standard, which is how
the standards organizations earn revenue to support the
engineers, scientists, etc. that develop the tests and
standards and monitor the results, if required.
So, as you can see, there's a lot more to this entire
topic than just the AMA or the government coming down on
motorcyclists...
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