Tytuł pozycji:
Modulation effect of vibration frequency of an unsprung heavy machine under the variable road adhesion conditions
Mobile heavy machines as unsprung vehicles exhibit low dissipation ability, hence the ride even at low speeds
may give rise to intensive vibration. Particularly dangerous situations occur when the road wheels break away from
the road surface due to the ’galloping’ effect, being the result of excited vertical and angular vibration of the machine
frame in the vertical plane of symmetry. That implies a major restriction on the ride velocity, which negatively impacts
on the machine performance. Vibrations thus produced are mostly in the low-frequency range and hence energy
dissipation in tyres will reduce the vibration intensity in a minor degree only. The motion of tired wheels will always
involve some slipping. While investigating the feasibility of increasing the efficiency of the vibration reduction
systems, one ought to take into account the variable adhesion of road wheels due to different dynamic loading acting
on the vehicle axles during the ride. Observations of unsprung machines during the ride suggest the occurrence of
self-excited vibration. Mobile machines constitute dynamic systems, which can be governed by nonlinear, sometimes
non-stationary differential equations of motion. Their stability also depends on intensity of external vibrations. This
study investigates the motion of unsprung mobile machines, taking into account the dynamic processes in the driving
system under the conditions of the variable adhesion of road wheels. The model of interaction between a tired wheel
and the terrain takes into account the relationship between the road wheel adhesion factor and the slipping action.
Mathcad supported by Matlab-Simulink and in the frequency domain – simulations in the time domain. The purpose of
the simulation procedure was to find the causes of the vibration modulation frequency and determine the conditions
triggering the occurrence of self-excited vibrations. Simulations are supported by the analysis of motion stability.