Methodology For Characterizing The Road Damaging Dynamics of Truck Tandem Suspensions

931693

10/01/1993

Event
SAE Brasil
Authors Abstract
Content
The road damage caused by heavy trucks is accentuated by the dynamic loads excited by roughness in the road. Simulation models of trucks are used to predict dynamic wheel loads, but special models are required for tandem suspensions. Parameter values to characterize tandem suspension systems can be measured quasi-statically on a suspension measurement facility, but it is not known how well they fit dynamic models.
The dynamic behavior of leaf-spring and air-spring tandem suspensions were measured on a hydraulic road simulator using remote parameter characterization techniques. The road simulator tests were duplicated with computer simulations of these suspensions based on quasi-static parameter measurements to compare dynamic load performance. In the case of the walking-beam suspension, simulated performance on the road was compared to experimental test data to evaluate the ability of the walking-beam model to predict dynamic load.
The simulation models proved very good at duplicating tandem suspension performance up through axle-hop resonance in the 10-15 Hz range.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/931693
Pages
10
Citation
Karamihas, S., and Gillespie, T., "Methodology For Characterizing The Road Damaging Dynamics of Truck Tandem Suspensions," SAE Technical Paper 931693, 1993, https://doi.org/10.4271/931693.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Oct 1, 1993
Product Code
931693
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English