"Obviously for India, the horn is a category in itself," Michael
Perschke, director at Audi India, told Monday's Mint newspaper.
"You take a European horn and it will be gone in a week or two.
With the amount of honking in Mumbai, we do on a daily basis what an average
German does on an annual basis."
Perschke said the horns are specially adapted for driving
conditions in India, a booming market where Audi is one of many foreign car
brands competing for increasingly wealthy customers.
"The horn is tested differently -- with two continuous weeks only
of honking, the setting of the horn is different, with different suppliers," he
said.
Perschke also added that so many Audi owners in India have
personal chauffeurs that car interiors have been redesigned so that "you can be
more in command from the rear seat."
Roads in India are often in poor repair, ranging from pot-holed
major highways to dirt tracks in cities, while bullock carts, cows, rickshaws
and bicycles often compete with cars and trucks for space.
More than 133,938 people died on India's roads in 2010, according
to the National Crime Records Bureau -- a rate of 366 deaths a day.