Could the difference be the tires? In my FR-S when traveling at the 100km/h (62mph) limit I find it MUCH quieter on the highway then my stock Integra GSR it replaced. When I start travelling faster it does get noisier, but nothing compared to my old DC2
@Fordson, that rather depends on the 15 year old car in question. As a former Subaru owner I would have no problem believing that the Acura has a smoother and quieter engine. It would also have narrower tires than IL's modified FR-S and the Integra body w
@fordson, I would consider both cars sport compacts but the integra was a GSR, not the Type R and had as much sound deadening as the other models. I never said all if the noise was engine, yes the engine was louder but there was more noise in general. I w
It's very difficult to get the nuances of how "noisy" a car is through video, unless it's directly compared to something else we're all familiar with (like a rental Focus or Camry). That being said, I don't remember this car being noisier than 1990's-mid 2000's Hondas? I second the extremecontacts if you're using this thing for a daily driver and you value comfort and quiet (and rain performance)- Pilot Super Sports are a really good quiet performance tire if you can take the slightly harder edge.
Guys, I guess the issue with the FR-S is that it's a car with high-performance tires - and directional tires at that - that have a few miles on them and they are starting to get loud. I would have rotated them before now - don't know if Edmunds did that. More to the point, the car is built to a strict price point and weight point, and road and engine noise was just not a priority. Others have pointed to the tight rear seat and lack of hatchback design as reasons not to have this as a DD, but I think the lack of NVH control is at least as big an issue.
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