I would disagree with this.
Every single person I’ve tried to explain the noise to has had no idea what I was talking about until I REALLY dug deep in explaining what they were looking for. Even the half a dozen Hyundai techs (including an engineer that was sent over from Korea to diagnose another issue with my car) were unable to hear it until I spent about 10 minutes explaining it to them, going on drives (particularly slowly, and beside concrete walls) and pin pointing the precise sound before the aha moment of “ohhhh that noise!” is finally achieved. Everyone’s initial response is “oh yea, that’s the VESS” and I have to tell them to listen “beyond” the VESS. We as owners are more sensitive to the sound because we live with it daily.
I’m definitely not calling you a liar, but I’ve been within close proximity to, I would guess, 20-30 Konas from all model years (most recently an EV show before covid shut us down) - every single one has the hissing noise. I’ve been at the dealer with my vehicle when they unloaded a shipment of brand new Kona’s - I went outside to watch the unloading process and sure enough - every one made the noise while driven onto the lot.
Also, this isn’t a localised issue - it’s been reported from Australia to Canada and in between. The engineer from Hyundai Korea explained the frequency pitch to me, and having to dig way back into my own engineering degree days - pitch/frequency modulation makes absolutely perfect sense.
So I suppose congratulations are in order as you, my friend, are the sole owner of a silent Kona EV.
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