hutch325
Mechanical
- Apr 30, 2004
- 32
Okay, time for a long post.
I am looking for advice on simulating some suspension elements. I currently have a quarter-car model in Simulink (MATLAB) that I am using as a tool to specify damper characteristics for a BMW using stiffer springs than stock (along with some Excel-based calcs for natural freq. and damping ratio).
A little history: I got started on this after being unsatisfied with the various aftermarket suspensions available in kit form and essentially ended up increasing the spring rates significantly and using some "sport" dampers at least for a trial run (that was a couple years ago). I've gone through a few different setups with various levels of analysis before testing each one. I wish I could say it has been a well-designed test program but realistically it has been a learning experience done in the evenings after my day engineering job (much to the chagrin of my fiance in some cases).
In any event, I am running into a couple roadblocks. My model includes tire stiffness, spring stiffness, damper characteristic (non-linearity modeled using a lookup table), and accounts for the motion ratios of the spring and damper. Two things I am looking for suggestions on:
1. The tire vertical stiffness model.
Originally I was not modeling the tire stiffness as I am not really concerned about the wheel hop mode for now, but later I added a tire stiffness after encountering some odd bouncing after hitting certain bumps, particularly with the rear suspension. It turns out the rebound damping was too high, and the suspension was extending quite slowly while the tire sidewall oscillated, resulting in some interesting harmonic motion. The characteristic was not exhibited on the racetrack since the surface is quite smooth but on the street (especially in Pittsburgh) it was quite noticeable and certainly unacceptable.
After adding a simple linear spring to model the tire, I am able to at least produce a prediction similar to the actual results, but I am looking to refine the model. As an initial guess I am using a stiffness 1000 lb/in (for a 225/50-16 tire). Any suggestions on an appropriate stiffness value to use? Or an appropriate damping ratio or hysteresis to model? Or an SAE paper or reference to search in? Milliken's RCVD doesn't seem to provide any info on this particular tire characteristic (at least not that I've found).
2. How to model the elastomer springs
I currently have no model for the elastomer springs, mainly because I don't know how I should model the hysteretic characteristic (i.e. I don't know what the characteristics are - making the model once I have an idea of the characteristic shouldn't be a problem). Will the elastomer spring rebound fast enough that I will need to account for its stiffness when specifying the damper characteristic, or does it essentially function as a progressive rate spring in compression and then have a zero rate in rebound? I suspect neither modeling it as a pure spring nor only considering its stiffness in compression is the correct strategy. Unfortunately, testing is pretty much out of the question. Again, any suggestions or suggested references? I did find one that has potential on the SAE website: Does anyone know if it contains useful information?
I do realize I'm just touching the tip of the iceberg with the quarter-car model but I don't have access to more advanced software such as ADAMS (although I am using Susprog3D for geometry calcs). Testing is pretty much limited to spring/elastomer static stiffness, damper characteristic measurement, and road and track testing.
Thanks for any information, and critiques are welcome.
Chris
I am looking for advice on simulating some suspension elements. I currently have a quarter-car model in Simulink (MATLAB) that I am using as a tool to specify damper characteristics for a BMW using stiffer springs than stock (along with some Excel-based calcs for natural freq. and damping ratio).
A little history: I got started on this after being unsatisfied with the various aftermarket suspensions available in kit form and essentially ended up increasing the spring rates significantly and using some "sport" dampers at least for a trial run (that was a couple years ago). I've gone through a few different setups with various levels of analysis before testing each one. I wish I could say it has been a well-designed test program but realistically it has been a learning experience done in the evenings after my day engineering job (much to the chagrin of my fiance in some cases).
In any event, I am running into a couple roadblocks. My model includes tire stiffness, spring stiffness, damper characteristic (non-linearity modeled using a lookup table), and accounts for the motion ratios of the spring and damper. Two things I am looking for suggestions on:
1. The tire vertical stiffness model.
Originally I was not modeling the tire stiffness as I am not really concerned about the wheel hop mode for now, but later I added a tire stiffness after encountering some odd bouncing after hitting certain bumps, particularly with the rear suspension. It turns out the rebound damping was too high, and the suspension was extending quite slowly while the tire sidewall oscillated, resulting in some interesting harmonic motion. The characteristic was not exhibited on the racetrack since the surface is quite smooth but on the street (especially in Pittsburgh) it was quite noticeable and certainly unacceptable.
After adding a simple linear spring to model the tire, I am able to at least produce a prediction similar to the actual results, but I am looking to refine the model. As an initial guess I am using a stiffness 1000 lb/in (for a 225/50-16 tire). Any suggestions on an appropriate stiffness value to use? Or an appropriate damping ratio or hysteresis to model? Or an SAE paper or reference to search in? Milliken's RCVD doesn't seem to provide any info on this particular tire characteristic (at least not that I've found).
2. How to model the elastomer springs
I currently have no model for the elastomer springs, mainly because I don't know how I should model the hysteretic characteristic (i.e. I don't know what the characteristics are - making the model once I have an idea of the characteristic shouldn't be a problem). Will the elastomer spring rebound fast enough that I will need to account for its stiffness when specifying the damper characteristic, or does it essentially function as a progressive rate spring in compression and then have a zero rate in rebound? I suspect neither modeling it as a pure spring nor only considering its stiffness in compression is the correct strategy. Unfortunately, testing is pretty much out of the question. Again, any suggestions or suggested references? I did find one that has potential on the SAE website: Does anyone know if it contains useful information?
I do realize I'm just touching the tip of the iceberg with the quarter-car model but I don't have access to more advanced software such as ADAMS (although I am using Susprog3D for geometry calcs). Testing is pretty much limited to spring/elastomer static stiffness, damper characteristic measurement, and road and track testing.
Thanks for any information, and critiques are welcome.
Chris