Yeah, it's the deep baritone drone for me too. Low frequency drone is hard thing to muffle sometimes.
I even went as far as buying a quiet ride helmet. It has ear muffs in it and helped reduce wind and high frequency noise. It didn't reduce the drone though, so I tried a set of active noise cancelling ear buds.
Wearing the active noise cancelling ear buds inside the quiet ride helmet totally eliminated it! However they are kind of a hassle to wear in a helmet and are not all that comfortable on long rides.
So next I modified and installed a set of Bose noise cancelling head phones in my quiet ride helmet.
The noise cancelling head phones eliminate about 90% of the drone, however if I pin the throttle the added sound over powers the microphone system in the head phone unit and turns them off while under WOT. I'm still kinda playing around with that set up to see if I can get rid of the WOT noise cancelling cut off.
It would be nice to make the sled itself quieter though. Basically there are two types of noise cancellation, passive and active.
Passive noise cancellation is normally done through sound absorption, such as using various types of packing. Passive noise cancellation is effective at reducing higher frequency noises but is typically not as effective at reducing low frequency (drone) noise.
Active noise cancellation is where a particular sound frequency is either reproduced (like in noise cancelling head phones/ear buds) or reflected (helmholtz pipe) back to the source. Since the sound waves are at the same frequency they cancel each other out. Active or reflective noise cancellation isn't as effective at cancelling out higher frequency sounds as passive noise reduction, however it is much more effective at low frequency drones. The trick in all this is to figure out what the Hz of the offending sound is and building a pipe the correct length that will fit under the hood!