Transient Clunk Response of a Driveline System: Laboratory Experiment and Analytical Studies

2007-01-2233

05/15/2007

Authors
Abstract
Content
A laboratory experiment is designed to examine the clunk phenomenon. A static torque is applied to a driveline system via the mass of an overhanging torsion bar and electromagnet. Then an applied load may be varied via attached mass and released to simulate the step down (tip-out) response of the system. Shaft torques and torsional and translational accelerations are recorded at pre-defined locations. The static torque closes up the driveline clearances in the pinion/ring (crown wheel) mesh. With release of the applied load the driveline undergoes transient vibration. Further, the ratio of preload to static load is adjusted to lead to either no-impact or impact events. Test A provides a ‘linear’ result where the contact stiffness does not pass into clearance. This test is used for confirming transient response and studying friction and damping. Test B is for mass release with sufficient applied torque to pass into clearance, allowing the study of the clunk. A set of non-linear differential equations describe the experiment and the applicable dry friction coefficients are experimentally found. Various test conditions (corresponding to no impacts, and single-sided or double-sided impacts) are successfully simulated. Numerical and experimental time histories compare well.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-2233
Pages
11
Citation
Gurm, J., Chen, W., Keyvanmanesh, A., Abe, T. et al., "Transient Clunk Response of a Driveline System: Laboratory Experiment and Analytical Studies," SAE Technical Paper 2007-01-2233, 2007, https://doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-2233.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
May 15, 2007
Product Code
2007-01-2233
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English