Effective Solutions to Decreasing Load Conflicts Using 4DOF Road Test Simulators 2007-01-1350
Road test simulators are widely used for vehicle durability tests in the automotive industry. In order to develop road simulator durability tests, on-road load data is acquired. Then, the road test simulator (RTS) is set up according to the vehicle dimensions such as track, wheel base and tire rolling radius, so that the on-road load data can be dynamically replicated. The drive files, which are the time histories that control the simulator, are then developed by an iterative process. The fidelity of the resulting simulation is a function of both the simulator, including geometric and kinematic characteristics and the degree to which the drive files replicate the on-road data. However, there is often conflict between different load channels during simulation development. On a 4-degree-of-freedom (4DOF) simulator in particular, replicating both horizontal spindle loads and the camber moment about the spindle axis is frequently difficult. This paper investigates factors affecting such conflicts in 4DOF road test simulations. Solutions to reduce these conflicts in the areas of simulator setup, data processing, and iteration strategies are discussed.
Citation: Wu, V., Andrews, G., Vermeulen, C., Wong, D. et al., "Effective Solutions to Decreasing Load Conflicts Using 4DOF Road Test Simulators," SAE Technical Paper 2007-01-1350, 2007, https://doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-1350. Download Citation
Author(s):
Vince Wu, Graham Andrews, Chad Vermeulen, Dan Wong, Gerry Peticca, Brian Nhan
Affiliated:
University of Windsor/DaimlerChrysler Canada Automotive Research and Development Center
Pages: 12
Event:
SAE World Congress & Exhibition
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
Load Simulation & Analysis in Automotive Engineering, 2007-SP-2107
Related Topics:
Simulators
Road tests
Camber
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