Filtern
Dokumenttyp
Schlagworte
- Oberflächentextur (3) (entfernen)
Institut
- Abteilung Fahrzeugtechnik (3) (entfernen)
Etwa ab Fahrgeschwindigkeiten von 60 km/h wird bei Pkw das Abrollgeräusch der Reifen auf der Straße zur dominierenden Geräuschquelle, Maßnahmen zur Minderung der Geräuschemission von Pkw auf schnell befahrenen Straßen müssen daher primär an den Entstehungsmechanismen dieser Reifen/Fahrbahngeräusche ansetzen. Bisher sind im wesentlichen zwei Hauptursachen für die Geräuscherzeugung gefunden worden: die Schwingungsanregung der Reifendecke und die Bildung aerodynamischer Schallquellen im Reifenprofil. Aus früheren Untersuchungen am Innentrommelprüfstand der Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen und Messungen an Autobahnfahrbahnen mit Zementdeckschichten ist bekannt, dass Feinsplittabstreuungen die Reifengeräuschemissionen absenken können. Am Prüfstand Fahrzeug/Fahrbahn der BASt wurden Reifengeräusch-, Rollwiderstands-, Griffigkeits- und Texturmessungen an Abstreuungen verschiedener Körnungen durchgeführt. Ziel der Untersuchungen war es dabei, festzustellen, ob durch Splittabstreuungen der Geräuschpegel von Pkw-Reifen abgesenkt werden kann, wie die Reifengeräuschemission von der Texturtiefe der Abstreuung abhängt und wie sich Rollwiderstand, Griffigkeit und Textur abgestreuter Decken mit der Verringerung der Größe des Abstreukorns verändern. Die günstigsten Ergebnisse bei Rollgeräusch und Rollwiderstand wurden im Bereich von Korndurchmessern zwischen 1-2 mm gefunden, zudem weisen die untersuchten Fahrbahndecken in diesem Kornbereich eine gute Griffigkeit auf.
During a lifecycle a tyre undergoes degradations due to mechanical wear and chemical ageing which affect not only durability and safety but also tyre/road noise emission and rolling resistance. This paper presents a study with the purpose to study how much tyre/road noise and rolling resistance change when car tyres are worn down from the original 8 mm tread depth to 2 mm, and when chemical ageing of the tyre rubber is simulated by exposure to heat. Six car tyres of different types were selected for the study which were worn on a wear machine in steps of 2 mm tread depth. Before, between and after these wear sessions tyre/road noise and rolling resistance were measured on two drum facilities with different surface textures, including replicas of ISO surfaces. Additionally, coast-by and CPX measurements were made on outdoor ISO test tracks. The results show that the wear and age effect was low on ISO surfaces but dramatic (noise increased with wear) on the rough-textured surface and high but opposite on an extremely smooth surface.
Road markings are an essential component of a safe road. In particular, the optical guidance at night and under wet conditions rates high. Special surface textures of road markings can enhance the nighttime visibility during wetness, but they can lead on the other hand to noise emission during passages of vehicles and thus annoy residents. In the present study the tyre/road marking noise is analysed based on two different measurement methods for traffic noise: Several different road markings with increased nighttime visibility during wetness were overrun and the noise was determined by controlled coast-by measurements as well as close-proximity measurements. For both measuring methods the averaged A-weighted sound pressure levels were determined and an analysis of the third octave spectra was performed in order to identify annoying tonal components. The results of both measurement methods were compared with each other. Limitations of the individual measurement methods were overcome by combining the data. Properties of road marking noise depending on the texture of the marking are discussed in relation to those of road surface noise. The results will help specifying road marking texture types that ensure less annoyance and at the same time good visibility at wetness and night-time.