Effects of Air and Road Surface Temperature on Tire Pavement Noise on an ISO 10844 Surface 2001-01-1598
Sound pressure level (SPL) measurements of vehicle coast-by runs of a passenger vehicle were performed across a range of temperatures. A controlled test track was used for the runs with six different sets of tires. A small but significant reduction of noise level with positive temperature increases was observed for some but not all tires. The reduction was evident in two of the tires at 53 kph and five of the tires at 80 kph. The SPL of the other tires showed little or no sensitivity to temperature. Frequency analysis of the tire noise showed that noise content above 1000 Hz is most affected by temperature change and noise in the range of 1200 to 2000 Hz is particularly sensitive to temperature changes. However, differences in SPL due to speed and tire type were much greater than that due to temperature
Citation: Landsberger, B., DeMoss, J., and McNerney, M., "Effects of Air and Road Surface Temperature on Tire Pavement Noise on an ISO 10844 Surface," SAE Technical Paper 2001-01-1598, 2001, https://doi.org/10.4271/2001-01-1598. Download Citation
Author(s):
Brian J. Landsberger, Jeffrey DeMoss, Michael McNerney
Affiliated:
Caterpillar, Inc., Dell Computer Co., Inc., The University of Texas at Austin