Abstract

Off-Road Environment Simulator (ORES) is a Real-time Hardware-in-the-Loop (RT-HIL) platform to simulate the dynamic response of off-road vehicles. This paper primarily focuses on the vehicle model development and validation using both field and rig testing using the ORES platform. Off-road vehicles are capable of operating on bumpy terrains where they are subjected to different resistive wheel torques due to non-unique ground friction conditions and wheel loads. If the powertrain torque output is not distributed in accordance with the resistive wheel torques, it may lead to transmission windup resulting in premature failure of various driveline components. In this study, the vehicle is driven over discrete bumps both in rig simulation and field trial. Different terrain enveloping models were evaluated namely the single point, radial-spring contact model and two-point follower (using circular and sinusoidal basis). These models were evaluated against the measured wheel acceleration responses. The two-point follower with sinusoidal basis strongly correlates with the measured responses and the ground excitations so obtained were used as inputs to a seven degree-of-freedom vehicle ride model. Ride model calculates the wheel loads and is eventually integrated with longitudinal dynamics, tire, driveline and test-rig models. Vehicle axle acceleration, wheel speed and drive torque responses are measured for validating the simulation results against field and rig trials. The field responses matches fairly well which validates the suitability of the proposed modeling approach.

Highlights

  • All-wheel-drive (AWD) vehicles are designed to be capable of operating in off-road environments

  • Undesired vibrations are introduced in the driveline by tires which act as an interconnection between road and driveline as external rotating masses [5]

  • The resulting thrust force obtained from the vertical dynamics and the longitudinal slip dynamics can be effectively used to simulate several prominent driveline effects like ‘Shuffle’ (2–8 Hz) and ‘Judder’ (7–20 Hz) [8]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

All-wheel-drive (AWD) vehicles are designed to be capable of operating in off-road environments. The vehicle is generally driven on these bumpy terrains at low-speeds and high drive torques At such low frequencies, the driveline dynamics are strongly connected with the longitudinal and pitch motions of vehicle body [1]. The resulting thrust force obtained from the vertical dynamics and the longitudinal slip dynamics can be effectively used to simulate several prominent driveline effects like ‘Shuffle’ (2–8 Hz) and ‘Judder’ (7–20 Hz) [8]. These off-road conditions are hard to replicate in a repetitive fashion in field-testing using a prototype.

Kanchwala
ORES: off-road environment simulator
Vehicle model
Vehicle ride dynamics
Vehicle longitudinal dynamics
Terrain modeling
Tire-terrain enveloping models
Tire modeling
Driveline model
Offline and rig models
Results: field vs rig testing
Conclusions
Findings
10 Future work
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call