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Journal Article

Axle Drive and Brake-Based Traction Control Interaction

2011-09-13
2011-01-2160
Brake-based traction control systems (TC), which utilize the brake of a spinning wheel of the drive axle, are widely used in passenger cars and light trucks, and recently were applied to all-wheel drive construction equipment. Such machines employ various types of interwheel drive systems (i.e., axle drives such as open differentials, limited slip differentials, etc.) to control torque split between the drive wheels and, thus, improve vehicle traction performance. As experimental research showed, the interaction between the traction control system and the axle drive can lead to unpredictable changes in vehicle performance. Lack of analytical work in this area motivated this study of the interaction and impact of the two systems on each other and the dynamics and performance of a drive axle.
Technical Paper

All-Wheel Drive Vehicle Energy Efficiency Evaluation

2004-03-08
2004-01-0864
All-wheel drive (AWD) vehicle performance considerably depends not only on total power amount needed for the vehicle motion in the given road/off-road conditions but also on the total power distribution among the drive wheels. In turn, this distribution is largely determined by the driveline system and its mechanisms installed in power dividing units. They are interwheel, interaxle reduction gears, and transfer cases. The paper presents analytical methods to evaluate the energy and, accordingly, fuel efficiency of vehicles with any arbitrary number of the drive wheels. The methods are based on vehicle power balance equations analysis and give formulas that functionally link the wheel circumferential forces with slip coefficients and other forces acting onto an AWD vehicle. The proposed methods take into consideration operational modes of vehicles that are tractive mode, load transportation, or a combination of both.
Technical Paper

Tire Longitudinal Elasticity and Effective Rolling Radii: Experimental Method and Data

2005-04-11
2005-01-1823
To evaluate traction and velocity performance and other operational properties of a vehicle requires data on some tire parameters including the effective rolling radius in the driven mode (no torque on a wheel), the effective radii in the drive mode (torque applied to the wheel), and also the tire longitudinal elasticity. When one evaluates vehicle performance, these parameters are extremely important for linking kinematic parameters (linear velocity and tire slip coefficient) with dynamic parameters (torque and traction net force) of a tired wheel. This paper presents an experimental method to determine the above tire parameters in laboratory facilities. The facilities include Lawrence Technological University's 4x4 vehicle dynamometer with individual control of each of the four wheels, Kistler RoaDyn® wheel force sensors that can measure three forces and three moments on a wheel, and a modern data acquisition system. The experimental data are also presented in the paper.
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