Intake Manifold Whistle Suppression in a Product Development Environment

2004-01-0395

03/08/2004

Event
SAE 2004 World Congress & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
An intake manifold produced a distinct whistle noise in a vehicle while driving through high torque conditions. The diagnostic tests in a steady air flow test bench helped reveal that the whistle was occurring due to the shear layer instabilities in the air flow over the sump cavity in the intake manifold which acts as an Helmoltz-like resonator. Joint time-frequency domain signal analysis was applied to detect the peak whistle. A sharp radius and a ramp at the upstream edge of the sump cavity reduced the peak whistle sound pressure level from 106dB to 85dB in the air flow bench and made the whistle inaudible in the vehicle. Tolerance study was performed on this geometry to allow manufacturing variations. A test method, using rapid prototype parts, has been developed in order to identify whistles early in the design cycle.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2004-01-0395
Pages
7
Citation
Kannan, V., Seifert, J., Golletti, T., and Hanner, D., "Intake Manifold Whistle Suppression in a Product Development Environment," SAE Technical Paper 2004-01-0395, 2004, https://doi.org/10.4271/2004-01-0395.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Mar 8, 2004
Product Code
2004-01-0395
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English