Engine Mount Tuning for Optimal Idle and Road Shake Response of Rear-Wheel-Drive Vehicles

2005-01-2528

05/16/2005

Event
SAE 2005 Noise and Vibration Conference and Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
Engine mount tuning is a multi-disciplinary exercise since it affects Idle-shake, Road-shake and powertrain noise response. Engine inertia is often used as a tuned absorber for controlling suspension resonance related road-shake issues. Last but not least, vehicle ride and handling may also be affected by mount tuning. In this work, Torque-Roll-Axis (TRA) decoupling of the rigid powertrain was used as a starting point for mount tuning. Nodal point of flexible powertrain bending was used to define the envelop for transmission mount locations. The frequency corresponding to the decoupled roll mode of the rigid powertrain was then adjusted for idle-shake and road-shake response management. The TRA decoupling procedure, cast as a multi-objective optimization problem, was applied to a body-on-frame sport-utility vehicle powertrain system. The process outlined in this work was verified by exercising a fullvehicle finite element model. The process produced a set of production feasible powertrain mount parameters for acceptable idle and road shake performance.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2005-01-2528
Pages
16
Citation
Akanda, A., and Adulla, C., "Engine Mount Tuning for Optimal Idle and Road Shake Response of Rear-Wheel-Drive Vehicles," SAE Technical Paper 2005-01-2528, 2005, https://doi.org/10.4271/2005-01-2528.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
May 16, 2005
Product Code
2005-01-2528
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English