Tire Noise Generation: The Roles of Tire and Road

762023

02/01/1976

Event
Highway Tire Noise Symposium
Authors Abstract
Content
A hemi-anechoic room and roadwheel facility, for the study of noise from small automobile tires, has been constructed at Stanford University. Fundamental research on sound generation mechanisms and superposition of simple tread elements has been conducted.
Through use of the signal average, (roadwheel) tire noise may be separated into tire-rotation correlated and roadwheel-rotatlon correlated components which account for essentially all of the sound. Level and spectral characteristics of these components are examined for three tires with very simple tread patterns and one commercial type tire. Results suggest that several distinct excitation mechanisms are responsible for “tire vibration” noise. The “groove pipe resonance” is discussed.
Problems in coastby-roadwheel noise measurement correlation are examined. Published coastby data are contrasted with component separated roadwheel data. Legislative implications are also suggested.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/762023
Pages
14
Citation
Pope, J., and Reynolds, W., "Tire Noise Generation: The Roles of Tire and Road," SAE Technical Paper 762023, 1976, https://doi.org/10.4271/762023.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 1976
Product Code
762023
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English