Abstract

Abstract A 18.4R38 tyre was tested at 124 kPa inflation pressure, approximately 24 kN axle load in a firm and in a tilled Yolo-loam soil using (i) constant slip, (ii) constant draught, (iii) varying slip and (iv) varying draught tyre testing procedures. The results indicated that the constant slip test procedure leads to repeatable and consistent results whereas a variable slip test procedure leads to considerable scatter in the data. The constant draught test procedure yielded acceptable results. Varying slip appeared to influence the system dynamics much more than varying draught during tyre testing. An accurate method of predicting “true rolling radius” and “true slip” for an assumed zero condition is presented. The concept of motion resistance, its variability due to assumed zero conditions, and possible interpretations are discussed. The traction test data indicates that the motion resistance is not constant but varies with slip.

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