cavedweller
Mechanical
- Jan 17, 2006
- 8
Hi guys,
Searched over the net, through books, papers and i can't find the info i need. Sorry in advance for all the questions, im hoping some industry guys can help me out.
Im tyring to do some 1/2 car simulations of a ford courier / mazda bravo ute (i think they are the same) and without pulling the thing apart bit by bit and measuring it i have no idea of exact weights etc. Ford is no help with the info. Stock weight is 1760kg, wheelbase is 3m, static unloaded cog is approx 1.35 from the front
Information abounds for cars and the NHVSA data is good for inertial properties but lacks unsprung & suspension parameter details.
Does any body know, or have some good estimates of these things.
1. Front unsprung mass (tires, wheels, linkages)
2. Rear unsprung mass (tires, wheels, diff, leaf springs)
3. Pitch moment of inertia / dynamic index unloaded/loaded
4. Approximate equivalent linear front and rear spring stiffness and damping values unloaded/loaded
For cars the combined unsprung mass is around 10% of the total weight, i have read for commercial type vehicles with leaf springs and solid axle this can go up to 25%, so its obviously something that will effect simulations big time if its not right, especially in an unloaded state at the rear of the ute.
Also, the rear leaf springs are non-linear, but can anybody give me some rough spring k's for small and large amplitudes (seeing they are mass and amplitude dependant), again it is not possible for me to pull them off and do the test, we just don't have the facilities at our uni. I performed some static tests with weights and measured the deflection but im not sure how accurate they are seeing they are static. The small deflection k should be 3 times greater according to gillespie, but im not sure if ford put some special friction coatings on, and its dual rate as well complicating things further.
Finally, i am a bit confused as to whether i should include the lift forces and weight transfer effects from acceleration/deceleration.
I am not interested in any roll effects (it’s a half car model), and from my readings the effects of acceleration / deceleration are short transient effects and only effect front to rear weight transfer a few% under "normal" driving conditions. Im not talking about evasive manoeuvres here, just normal conservative driving like your grandma does. Can they be ignored without alot of error?
However, lift forces can contribute 5-10% unloading force according to the book im reading, this would effect the system natural frequencies a fair bit correct???? I understand its related to the square of the forward velocity, but at what speed would these forces really effect things?
Again, data for cars is around, would the lift coeffeceints of around 0.3 be valid for a ute?
I can handle short duration transients in my simulations (weight transfer/gear shifts etc) but a longterm 5-10% reduction will throw a spanner in the works. The purpose of the simulation is to get the time domain data for the bounce and pitch modes. I want to try and get it close to real, but not super complex.
Anything else that would effect bounce and pitch modes that i have completely over looked??
Thanks in advance, any links/books/papers appreciated
-Matt
Searched over the net, through books, papers and i can't find the info i need. Sorry in advance for all the questions, im hoping some industry guys can help me out.
Im tyring to do some 1/2 car simulations of a ford courier / mazda bravo ute (i think they are the same) and without pulling the thing apart bit by bit and measuring it i have no idea of exact weights etc. Ford is no help with the info. Stock weight is 1760kg, wheelbase is 3m, static unloaded cog is approx 1.35 from the front
Information abounds for cars and the NHVSA data is good for inertial properties but lacks unsprung & suspension parameter details.
Does any body know, or have some good estimates of these things.
1. Front unsprung mass (tires, wheels, linkages)
2. Rear unsprung mass (tires, wheels, diff, leaf springs)
3. Pitch moment of inertia / dynamic index unloaded/loaded
4. Approximate equivalent linear front and rear spring stiffness and damping values unloaded/loaded
For cars the combined unsprung mass is around 10% of the total weight, i have read for commercial type vehicles with leaf springs and solid axle this can go up to 25%, so its obviously something that will effect simulations big time if its not right, especially in an unloaded state at the rear of the ute.
Also, the rear leaf springs are non-linear, but can anybody give me some rough spring k's for small and large amplitudes (seeing they are mass and amplitude dependant), again it is not possible for me to pull them off and do the test, we just don't have the facilities at our uni. I performed some static tests with weights and measured the deflection but im not sure how accurate they are seeing they are static. The small deflection k should be 3 times greater according to gillespie, but im not sure if ford put some special friction coatings on, and its dual rate as well complicating things further.
Finally, i am a bit confused as to whether i should include the lift forces and weight transfer effects from acceleration/deceleration.
I am not interested in any roll effects (it’s a half car model), and from my readings the effects of acceleration / deceleration are short transient effects and only effect front to rear weight transfer a few% under "normal" driving conditions. Im not talking about evasive manoeuvres here, just normal conservative driving like your grandma does. Can they be ignored without alot of error?
However, lift forces can contribute 5-10% unloading force according to the book im reading, this would effect the system natural frequencies a fair bit correct???? I understand its related to the square of the forward velocity, but at what speed would these forces really effect things?
Again, data for cars is around, would the lift coeffeceints of around 0.3 be valid for a ute?
I can handle short duration transients in my simulations (weight transfer/gear shifts etc) but a longterm 5-10% reduction will throw a spanner in the works. The purpose of the simulation is to get the time domain data for the bounce and pitch modes. I want to try and get it close to real, but not super complex.
Anything else that would effect bounce and pitch modes that i have completely over looked??
Thanks in advance, any links/books/papers appreciated
-Matt