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nv rick

Noisy engine/transmission normal up steep grades?

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The ICE has to work hard to get up a steep grade, and depending on battery SOC you can get a decent foot massage. The car puts the ICE into a state of power consumption to get the most out of it, so it will load the engine as much as it can, and that will make it feel like this. There are some hills by me that if my SC is low the car gets pretty loud going up them, but if SOC is high it just sounds normal.

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Thinner air too. Has to work harder to get the same power out of it, so higher RPM's wouldn't surprise me. When I drove from IL to CHino CA, I drove through Denver, and LV in my F150 Ecoboost. That truck pulled up those mountains in high gear and didn't even feel like it was under load. I would love to do that trip again in my MKT.

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I was there to get access to Swamp Ghost before they had shipped it to Hawaii. Wouldnt mind making the trip again though, but next time give myself more time for traveling and stay time, and maybe, just maybe seat time in a Warbird.

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Thinner air too. Has to work harder to get the same power out of it, so higher RPM's wouldn't surprise me. When I drove from IL to CHino CA, I drove through Denver, and LV in my F150 Ecoboost. That truck pulled up those mountains in high gear and didn't even feel like it was under load. I would love to do that trip again in my MKT.

The Ecoboost is a turbo supercharger system that may not lose very much power with altitude. The Ford boost appears to be close to one additional atmosphere of pressure ( 60" Hg intake manifold pressure ) with temporary boost over that. A non supercharged full throttle intake manifold pressure at sea level is close to 30" Hg less a little for induction friction losses. The big radials on airliners ran close to 60" with geared supercharging but they only had compression ratios of about 7. Modern car engines produce much more HP per cubic inch of displacement. The aircraft engines produced a very high percentage of rated power, about 70%, over their entire lifetime and maximum power every takeoff. The radials could produce about 75% power up to 25,000' so that was their optimum cruising altitude for a long haul. It remains to be seen if these small modern high compression, high boost engines will hold up. The manufacturers know what is required.

Edited by lolder

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Yeah the boost was great. Unlike the normal engines, the EB felt like it wasn't even working. I know the MKT has tons of power when I pulled the trailer, it hauled it easily though I can tell it was working hard. With today's oils and filters, and tight tolerence mototrs, I can see them lasting a lot longer than the older engines. I have a Freestyle I picked up recently with 171K on it and the engine runs smooth and quiet like the day it was built, no oil burning either.

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The intake noise of the Atkinson engines at high power is something that hasn't really been reduced enough yet. You know they're trying with the intake manifold resonator that we've discussed a lot. As with exhausts, most intake noise reduction would probably create restrictions they don't want either. Someone mentioned that the active noise reduction was dropped for 2014 and I can't find it mentioned in the specs either.

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I find the ANC can make it sound louder than it really is at times. ANC works by producing a counter sound, and sometimes that counter sound is deeper than the sound its trying to mask, so I hear a low resonance boom from the car. Sometimes I wonder if its the ICE or the ANC that I hear.

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Noise reduction has been used for years in headphones and other devices so it's well understood. Doing it in a larger space lowers the frequencies that it's effective for but it's valid to use in a car for the lower frequencies that are of concern. It's an electronic/audio feedback servo system that must be stable but that's just design details. If it has been discontinued that's interesting. I think it was only on the hybrid so it obviously was an attempt to lower the Atkinson noise.

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The 2015 order guide still lists "Active Noise Cancellation" as a standard feature for the FFHs.

i couldn't find it anywhere in the on-line build your own but a chat box popped up and they confirmed it had ANC and 911 assist.

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High speed acceleration in eCVT hybrids is better than the rated horsepower would suggest. Over about 40 mph, full throttle yields a steady red line rpm. There are no downshifts where the rpm dips down for the new ratio so all the peak HP is available for acceleration. It is noisy, however.

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