Experimental Analysis of Acoustic Coupling Vibration of Wheel and Suspension Vibration on Tire Cavity Resonance

2007-01-2345

05/15/2007

Event
SAE 2007 Noise and Vibration Conference and Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
It is difficult to improve tire cavity noise since the pressure of cavity resonance acts as a compelling force, and its low damping and high gain characteristics dominate the vibration of both the suspension and body. For this reason, the analysis described in this article aimed to clarify the design factors involved and to improve this phenomenon at the source. This was accomplished by investigating the acoustic coupling vibration mode of the wheel, which is the component that transmits the pressure of cavity resonance at first. In addition, the vibration characteristic of suspension was investigated also. A speaker-equipped sound pressure generator inside the tire and wheel assembly was developed and used to infer that wheel vibration under cavity resonance is a forced vibration mode with respect to the cavity resonance pressure distribution, not an eigenvalue mode, and this phenomenon may therefore be improved by optimizing the out-of-plane torsional stiffness of the disk. This inference was then verified on a car in actual driving conditions. And by analyzing suspension mode, it was clarified that the important mode of suspension is the camber direction resonance.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-2345
Pages
10
Citation
Hayashi, T., "Experimental Analysis of Acoustic Coupling Vibration of Wheel and Suspension Vibration on Tire Cavity Resonance," SAE Technical Paper 2007-01-2345, 2007, https://doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-2345.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
May 15, 2007
Product Code
2007-01-2345
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English