GB2149520A - Dynamometers - Google Patents

Dynamometers Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2149520A
GB2149520A GB08420741A GB8420741A GB2149520A GB 2149520 A GB2149520 A GB 2149520A GB 08420741 A GB08420741 A GB 08420741A GB 8420741 A GB8420741 A GB 8420741A GB 2149520 A GB2149520 A GB 2149520A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
energy
speed
drum
brake
dissipated
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB08420741A
Other versions
GB2149520B (en
GB8420741D0 (en
Inventor
Colin John Ray
Geoffrey Smith
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Vinters Ltd
Original Assignee
Vickers PLC
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Vickers PLC filed Critical Vickers PLC
Publication of GB8420741D0 publication Critical patent/GB8420741D0/en
Priority to US06/667,028 priority Critical patent/US4577497A/en
Publication of GB2149520A publication Critical patent/GB2149520A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2149520B publication Critical patent/GB2149520B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01LMEASURING FORCE, STRESS, TORQUE, WORK, MECHANICAL POWER, MECHANICAL EFFICIENCY, OR FLUID PRESSURE
    • G01L5/00Apparatus for, or methods of, measuring force, work, mechanical power, or torque, specially adapted for specific purposes
    • G01L5/28Apparatus for, or methods of, measuring force, work, mechanical power, or torque, specially adapted for specific purposes for testing brakes
    • G01L5/282Apparatus for, or methods of, measuring force, work, mechanical power, or torque, specially adapted for specific purposes for testing brakes the vehicle wheels cooperating with rotatable rolls
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01MTESTING STATIC OR DYNAMIC BALANCE OF MACHINES OR STRUCTURES; TESTING OF STRUCTURES OR APPARATUS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G01M17/00Testing of vehicles
    • G01M17/007Wheeled or endless-tracked vehicles
    • G01M17/0072Wheeled or endless-tracked vehicles the wheels of the vehicle co-operating with rotatable rolls

Abstract

A dynanometer for testing tyres and brakes comprises a drum (1) mounted for rotation and driven by drive means (2), a test body (6) coupled to the drum (1) for rotation therewith in a fixed velocity relationship, means (8, 9, 17) for deriving the energy absorbed or dissipated by the test body (6), means (7, 8) for determining the rotational velocity of the drum (1) or body (6) and control means (4, 22, 11) responsive to the energy absorbed or dissipated and to the rotational velocity and operative to supply a control signal to the drive means (2, 4) to maintain the energy absorbed or dissipated as a predetermined function of drum speed. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Improvements in dynamometers The present invention relates to a dynamometer that is of particular advantage in the testing of tyres and brakes of aircraft though it may alos be used to test other vehicle tyres and brakes and in general for monitoring the acceleration, deceleration or energy tolerance of any moving device coupled thereto such as a clutch or a motor.
The use of a so-called "chassis dynamometer" with inertial weights to measure the acceleration and deceleration performance of an automobile or other vehicle has long been known. An article by Knudsen R.F., "Inertia Electronicaily", ISA Journal, April 1958, Vol. 5, No.4, pp.52-54 describes the use of electrical torque to simulate drum inertia and thereby avoid the need to add or remove large bulky weights from the dynamometer shaft whenever it was desired to alter the inertia of the rolls or drums of the dynamometer.
Knudsen derived the inertia by differentiating the speed signal from a drum tachometer, amplifying it and feeding it back as an additional torque control signal to a dynamometertorque control circuit. Gunnel and Shaw have described in patent specification G B-A-1297813 a drum dynamometer testing machine for the tyres and brakes of land vehicles and aircraft in which the test tyre and wheel was braked and a brake effort signal was processed and fed as a control signal to determine the torque of a Ward-Leonard dynamo-electric machine that drove the drum. Friction and windage losses were compensated for by feeding a derived speed signal through a function generator as another control signal to be combined with the brake-effort related control signal and fed to the dynamo-electric machine.The result was again to give an apparent or effective inertia to the drum that was its true mechanical inertia multiplied by an adjustment factor. A practical machine of this kind was described by J.B. Roberts entitled "An Advanced High-Speed Dynamometer for Testing Aircraft Tyres, Wheels and Brakes" and read before the Applied Mechanics Groups of the Institution of Mechanical engineers on the 10th April 1974. A modified machine described by Thomas in Patent specification GB-A-1604320 monitored the change in kinetic energy of the drum and associated mechanical parts as the drum decelerated and derived a control signal for the drum drive motor to vary the apparent or effective inertia of the drum.But these machines of the "intertia simulation" kind merely used an electrical conrol system to simulate the removable weights of a conventional chassis dynamometer of the 1950's and embodied the assumption that it was satisfactory to monitor energy dissipation purely passively in terms of the inertia of the rotating parts and the change in rotational velocity. It has, however, been found that inertia simulation gives only limited accuracy and repeatability, particularly where the quantity of energy to be absorbed or dissipated is only a small proportion of the initial rotational energy of the moving parts and it is an object of the invention to provide a dynamometer that can be made of improved accuracy.
The invention relates to a dynamometer having a drive for a rotating shaft and a test article coupled thereto and a speed controller for the drive operable to maintain a required shaft speed and is based on the realisation that as the test progresses the energy so far absorbed or dissipated by the test article may be determined, compared with the total energy to be absorbed or dissipated by the test subject and used to generate from the initial rotational speed a speed demand signal according to a required speed change scheme, the said speed demand signal being fed to the speed controller. In other words the parameters of the test are the required velocity change and the required energy change of the test subject.No particular relationship between speed and energy absorption or dissipation is essential provided that energy absorbed or dissipated increments or decrements smoothly and continuously with rotational velocity and a defined total energy absorbed or dissipated corresponds to only a single rotational velocity. The most common test condition is that the square of the angular velocity varies as the energy dissipation but other conditions are possible, and, for example, a profile can be followed that represents the change in apparent mass of an aeroplane in its landing phase.
Broadly stated, thereforthe invention provides a dynamometer, comprising a member mounted for rotation and driven by driving means, a speed controller to maintain the speed of the member to the required speed in the presence of tractive load variations by controlling the driving means, a test subject mounted for rotation with the member and at the same speed, the test subject including brake means for exerting a braking torque on the member, velocity sensor means for sensing the rotational velocity of the member, power sensor means for sensing power supplied by the driving means and/or dissipated as brake load, and control apparatus having inputs for an initial rotational velocity and for an amount of energy to be dissipated and operable (a) after the brake has been applied to determine from the sensed rotational velocity and the power supplied or dissipated the energy that has been dissipated since the brake was applied, (b) to derive a proper rotational speed from the initial rotational velocity of the member, the energy already dissipated and the total energy to be dissipated and (c) to output the proper speed for the member to the speed controller.
The invention further provides a dynamometer comprising a drum mounted for rotation and driven by drive means, a test body coupled to the drum for rotation therewith in a fixed velocity relationship, means for supplying or removing energy to or from the test body to increase or decrease the rotational speed thereof means for deriving the rotational velocity of the drum or the test body and control means responsive to the energy absorbed or dissipated and to determined rotational velocity and operative to supply a control signal to the drive means to maintain the energy absorbed or dissipated while said energy supply or removal means is operative as a predetermined function of rotational velocity.
According to a preferred feature the control means first receives a signal to drive the drum to an intended rotational velocity for the start of the test, means is operated to initiate the supply or removal of energy to or from the test body, the rotational velocity when the energy supply or removal is initiated is measured, and the control means responds to the measured initial rotational velocity and to the amount of energy supplied or dissipated to calculate the proper rotational velocity progressively as the test proceeds and to feed a velocity demand signal to the drive means.
It is a particular feature of the invention that the drum drive with its associated power control and speed control are separated from the energy control function which operates as an additional control loop external to the drum drive control loops. In practice this additional control loop has been found to give rise to much more stable and reproducable results.
The invention will now be further described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings in which corresponding parts are designated by the same reference numeral, and Figure lisa block diagram of a dynamometer and control system according to a first embodiment of the invention; Figure 2 is a block diagram of the dynamometer illustrated in more detail; Figure 3 is a diagram schematically illustrating a suitable control system; Figure 4 is a block diagram of a dynamometer and control system for brake testing, and Figure 5 is a block diagram of a dynamometer and control system for tyre, wheel and brake testing according to a yet further embodiment of the invention;; In Figure 1 the speed of rotation of a dynamometer or rolling road drum 1 of a tyre and brake testing machine is set by means of a speed demand generator 11 that receives at 20 and 21 instructions defining the initial conditions of the test in terms of the required initial speed of the drum 1 and of the energy that is to be dissipated during the test. The generator 11 outputs a speed demand signal woern to a comparator 22 that is fed at 23 with a drum speed signal measured by means of speed sensor 7 and the summing junction or comparator 22 in turn outputs a speed error signal to a drum speed controller 4 that maintains the speed error signal to an acceptably low value.The drum drive motor 2 which electrically varies the speed of drum 1 is driven by means of a power source or motor drive system 3 that may be a Ward leonard synchronous motor/DC generator set or may be a thyristor or similar electronic motor control that drives the motor 2 direct from the incoming mains. A tyre wheel and brake assembly 6 holds the tyre against the drum 1 during the test at a predefined load to represent the proportion of the vehicle weight that forces the tyre against the surface of the drum 1. The said loading system usually has a closed loop controller that maintains the load under braking conditons against variations in reaction between the tyre and the drum 1.
The aforesaid drive system is used in combination with an energy control system that can monitor either the dissipation of energy in the brake or in the assembly of the tyre wheel and brake 6. For monitoring the brake energy a wheel speed sensor 8 and a brake torque sensor 9 determine the torque applied by the brake on the wheel and tyre combination. They feed a wheel speed signal ww and a brake torque signal Te to a calculator 17 that calculates the energy dissipated in the brake from time to time and feeds a signal Edis denoting the amount of energy dissipation via selector 18 to the speed demand generator 11. in the alternative position of the selector 18 the energy dissipation of the tyre, wheel and brake combination is monitored.The drum speed sensor 7 provides a signal wD and a current sensor 10 determines the gross motive force exerted by the motor 2 on the drum 1. In Figure 1 this is represented by sensing the motor current which is then corrected to determine the effective electrical torque applied to the drum. But as an alternative the effective electrical torque applied to the drum may be measured directly by means of a torque transducer.
During a test the speed demand generator 11 responds to an indication from the calculator 17 of the energy so far dissipated and evaluates a drum speed setting appropriate for dissipation of the required energy according to a preset dissipation function and the final speed and energy conditions. An energy dissipation logic control unit 12 serves to control the test envelope to ensure good repeatability and closely defined test boundaries.In particular it controls the performance of inter alia the following functions: (a) entry of an initial rotational speed WR and energy to be dissipated; (b) running the drum up to the speed wR5 (c) engagement of the (initially disengaged) tyre wheel and brake assembly 6 under load conditions required for the test and reestablishment of a steady speed; (d) application of the brake in the assembly 6 and determination simultaneously of the initial drum speed WD$ and initial drum energy ED (e) monitoring the energy flow in the system; (f) When the required drum speed Woem at the end of the test is zero monitoring the actual drum speed w0.
(A small final drum speed used to define test stop may be acceptable because the energy error contribution may be negligible).
An electrical energy calculator 13 determines the amount of energy supplied to or removed from the drum 1 by motor 2. Motor current from sensor 10 is processed by the calculator 13 which takes account of speed-independent losses and supplies an electrical energy supplied signal EES to a tyre wheel and brake energy dissipated calculator 14. Drum speed sensed by sensor 7 is fed to a mechanical loss energy calculator 14 which determines the energy lost in speed dependant losses such as bearing friction and windage and supplies a mechanical energy loss signal EMLto the calculator 14. Also responsive to drum speed is a calculator 15 for drum kinetic energy expended that feeds a signal EoLtO the calculator 16.The calculator 14 processes the signals EES, EML and EDL to derive the energy dissipated by the tyre wheel and brake - i.e. it determines the energy that is unaccounted for by mechanical losses, electrical energy supplied or removed, and current drum kinetic energy and that must therefore have flowed across the surface of the drum 1 and into the tyre wheel and brake assembly 6.
Figure 2 shows the principal mechanical parts and trandsucers of a dynamometer according to the invention. Motor current IA sensed at 28 and shaft speed wD sensed at 7 are forwarded to function generator 30 which outputs the effective motor torque Te. The motor 2 may be connected through a rigid shaft 20a to the drum 20b. Alternatively the connection may be through a torque shaft 20c to the drum 20d with an accelerometer 20h, the directly measured shaft torque TD being used instead of motor current to monitor energy. A third alternative is to interpose a gear box 20e between the motor 2 and a drum 20g in which case the use of a torque shaft 20f is mandatory.
The testing of tyres and brakes inherently involves the regulation of energy dissipation so that the dynamometer drum 1 is decelerated from its given initial speed wD by the assembly under test with accurate dissipation of the requisite quantity of energy ERO. The energy available at the start of the test is dissipated by the brake or by the tyre wheel and brake combination which acts as an energy sink. Thus at any time t after a deceleration test has begun.
ERem = ER ~ Eoie ------(1) where ERem represents the energy remaining to be dissipated, ERO is as defined above and EDi, represents the amount of energy that has been dissipated. Normalising with respect to the source energy ERiZi gives fractional values eF: EF Rem = 1 EF Dis (2) The kinetic energy of the system is that of its rotating mechanical parts and is proportional to the square of the angular velocity wand may be expressed in terms of the current drum speed w0 and the initial drum speed woIZi as follows.
EF Rem = w02/ w200 (3) Combining equations 1,2 and 3 we obtain: wD w00(1 = WD, EDis. ERO) (4) Equation (4) governs the flow of energy from the source (drum and other rotating parts) to the sinkzbrake or tyre wheel and brake) and the drum speed w0 can be used as a control variable, the fraction of the original energy that has been dissipated being monitored and a consistent and representative velocity being demanded from the mechanical system. It will be noted that the angular velocity wD can be used as the control variable without reference to the actual or simulated inertia of the system and that the energyispeed function is time independent.Equation 4 defines a parabolic energy/speed function but it is not essential that such a parabolic function be strictly adhered to provided that the required energy ERO is dissipated into the sink and the drum speed wD and residual energy fraction EF Rem are always reducing. Thus, for example, a profile could be followed that took acount ofthe change of the apparent mass of an aeroplane with distance travelled during the landing phase.
In brake energy regulation, the energy dissipated in the brake is equivalent to the "potential energy" of the brake. The brake torque will vary with time and may be represented by a function TB(t) and the distance through which the torque acts is also a function of time depending on the wheel velocity and may be represented by a function ww(t).3t. Accordingly the brake energy dissipation is given by the equation.
where t5 is the time at the start of the test. Both the brake torque and wheel speed are measured directly (8, 9) and the calculator 17 can calculate the energy EDi, according to equation (5) which is then normalised and fed to the speed demand generator 11.The discrete form of equation (5) for the energy dissipation Ee Dips after n sample periods of duration At is
Where the values of Te andWw are averages. The energy dissipated in the tyre, wheel and brake combination is equivalent to the brake energy EB plus an allowance for energy dissipated in the tyre and energy dissipated from the wheel. The tyre cannot be instrumented to provide an accurate direct measure of the energy that it dissipates, but the tyre wheel and brake energy can be derived by determining the energy lost from the drum system 1 with calibration for and allowance of the various energy losses.Taking an energy balance of the drum drive system provides the energy passed to the tyre wheel and brake combination which is given by the fall in kinetic energy of the drum and the electrical energy supplied to the drum less the mechanical energy lost i.e.
ETWB = (EDO - EO) + EEs- EML where the terms have the meanings above specified.
Expanding these terms gives
wherein JD is the rotating mass inertia, TE is the electrical torque, TL is the torque due to mechanical losses and the other parameters have the meanings above specified. All the above parameters can be measured either directly or indirectly and the energy dissipation ETWBDIS calculated. Again ETWBDIS can be normalised and fed through selector 18 to the speed demand generator 11.Again, in practice the equation (8) is used in discrete form with a number n of sampling periods At t long so that
wherein TEX, and wadi are average values of the electrical and loss torques and the drum speed and WD(n) and WD(O) are instantaneous values.
A representation of a practical control circuit that performs the calculations set out above is illustrated in Figure 3. It can calculate both brake energy dissipated and tyre wheel and brake energy dissipated and also performs the function of speed demand generation. At the start of the test the energy ERa required to be dissipated is fed to divider 50 and the initial drum speed wDer is fed via relay to the comparator 22, the coil of the relay being energised only when a test running parameter TRun is not true. The selector 18 is set so that brake energy is monitored and sensors 8 and 9 feed the mechanical brake torque T8 and the wheel speed ww to relays 52, 53 whose states depend upon the value of the parameter TRun and which connect to a null input when TRun is false. At the start of the test the parameters ER and woe are obtained and the drum is run upto speed w0 after which the tyre is engaged with the drum under landing load conditions and the drum is allowed to reattain a steady speed. Then an "apply brakes" signal is sent to the tyre wheel and brake assembly 6 and the initial drum speed wDer is measured and the initial drum energy Ece is calculated. The parameter TRun is now true and the state of relay 51 changes, thereby initiating energy monitoring and control. The state of relays 52, 53 also changes when TRun is true thereby initiating energy monitoring and control.The parameters TB and ww are fed to multiplier 54 and integrator 55 so that for the run period (t-tS) while TRun is true the brake energy EB fed to divider 50 is given by:
Note that when TRun is false the brake energy fed to divider 50 is O.The divider 50 and subtractor 56 generate the function 1 - EFDis which by reason of the limiter 51 obeys the relationship: 0 < 1 - EF Dis < 1.0 ....... (9) The output is then fed to square root calculator 58 and to multiplier 59 fed with the measured drum velocity at the start time to derive: WDem = WRO TRun False ------(10) Woem = WD# wD#/(1 - EDis/ER) TRun - True -----(11) When measuring the tyre wheel and brake energy the electrical energy TE is input through relay 60 to multiplier 61 where it is multiplied by the drum speed w0 input through relay 62 and the product passes to integrator 63 and adder 64.Relays 60, 62 are controlled according to the state of TRun such that; EEs=#:Trun=False ------(12)
The drum velocity wo is fed to device 65 that outputs the appropriate mechanical loss torque TL which is multiplied by the drum velocity at multiplier 66 and fed to integrator 67, thereby giving EML = 0; TRun = False ...... (14)
The measured EML is also fed to adder 64.The current drum velocity wD is further fed to squares calculator 68 and thence to multiplier 69 where it is multiplied by the half inertia JDI2 to give a drum kinetic energy signal to adder 64 that obeys ED =#;TRun = False ------(16) ED = 1I2JDWD2; TrUn = True ------(17) The angular velocity wD is also fed to latch 70 controlled by a test start pulse and thence to squares calculator 71 and multiplier 72 to derive E00 which is fed to adder 64 and obeys the relationships.
ED = #;TRun = False ------(18) ED = 1/2 JD WD20; TRun = True ----(19) The adder 64 calculates the tyre wheel and brake energy according to equation 7 and outputs it to the divider 50 when the selector 18 is in the appropriate position.
Figure 4 is a block diagram of a Brake Test Machine. The objective of the machine is the same as brake testing in Figure 1 which enables a predetermined quantity of energy to be dissipated in the brake unit 6'.
The principal difference of this application is the absence of a drum and tyre since the shaft of brake 6' is directly connected to the motor drive shaft and brake speed is equated to motor speed rather than wheel speed. The energy control equations are identical viz.
There is no requirement to handle the equivalent of Tyre Wheel and Brake Energy.
Figure 5 shows an alternative arrangement for measuring the tyre, wheel and brake energy directly and using that information to calculate ETWB- The tyre wheel and brake energy dissipated ETWE may be derived from the drum surface speed and the retarding force on the drum by the equation.
where FR represents the total retarding force at the drum/tyre interface, r0 represents the radius of the drum, W0 represents the drum speed and the test has proceeded up to time t. By measuring the drum retarding force directly, there is no need to instrument or calibrate the drive system resulting in a lower cost drive and speed controller. Thus a tyre forces sensor 80 in the form of a transducer associated with the loading head/wheel mounting mechanisms resolves the forces at the contact point between tyre wheel and brake assembly 6 and the drum 1 and outputs through line 81 a tyre force signal to a tyre force resolution module 82 that calculates the total retarding force FR at the interface and outputs a force signal in line 83 to the ETWB calculator 16.

Claims (14)

1. A dynamometer comprising a member mounted for rotation and driven by driving means, a speed controller to maintain the speed of the member to the required speed in the presence of tractive load variations by controlling the driving means, a test subject mounted for rotation with the member and at the same speed, the test subject including brake means for exerting a braking torque on the member, velocity sensor means for sensing the rotational velocity of the member, power sensor means for sensing power supplied by the driving means and/or dissipated as brake load, and control apparatus having inputs for an initial rotational velocity and for an amount of energy to be dissipated and operable (a) after the brake has been applied to determine from the sensed rotational velocity and the power supplied or dissipated the energy that has been dissipated since the brake was applied, (b) to derive a proper rotational speed from the initial rotational velocity of the member, the energy already dissipated and the total energy to be dissipated and (c) to output the proper speed for the member to the speed controller.
2. A dynamometer according to claim 1, wherein the member is a drum, the test subject is a wheel mounted for rotation in contact with the surface of the drum and frictionally engaged therewith so that both rotate at the same surface speed, and the brake means exerts a tractive load on the wheel.
3. A dynamometer according to Claim 2, wherein the drum is directly coupled to the shaft of an electric drive motor.
4. A dynamometer according to Claim 2, wherein the drum is coupled to the shaft of an electric drive motor via a torque shaft.
5. A dynamometer acording to Claim 2 wherein the drum is coupled to the shaft of an electric drive motor via a gear box and a torque shaft.
6. A dynamometer according to Claim 1 wherein the test subject is a brake directly coupled to a rotating shaft of the dynamometer.
7. A dynamometer according to any preceding claim, wherein the drive means is controlled by means of a Ward Leonard DC generator/ synchronous motor set or by means of a thyristor or similar electronic motor control.
8. A dynamometer according to any preceding claim, wherein the control apparatus is switched by switch means between a first mode where it operates to determine the energy dissipated in the brake alone and a second mode where it operates to determine the energy dissipated in the wheel and brake and in a tyre attached to the wheel.
9. A dynamometer according to Claim 8 wherein, when the control means responds to the rotational velocity of the wheel and the brake torque and is operative to multiply the rotational velocity and torque and to integrate with time to derive the brake energy dissipated.
10. A dynamometer acording to Claim 8 or 9 wherein the control means responds to the rotational speed of the member and the current supplied to the drive motor and/or a signal from the torque shaft between the member and the motor and is operative to determine the change in the drum kinetic energy, the electrical energy supplied as a time integral of the product of electrical drive torque and speed of the member, and the mechanical losses as a time integral of the product of a mechanical loss torque and speed of the member to derive the energy dissipated in the wheel, brake and tyre.
11. A dynamometer According to Claim 8 or 9 further comprising transducer means arranged to sense the total retarding force on the member and the control means calculates energy dissipation as a time integral of the product of the retarding force, radius of the member and speed of the member.
12. A dynamometer according to any preceding claim wherein the control means outputs a speed demand signal to the speed controller after the brake has been applied that causes the speed of the member to obey the relationship:
where w0 is the current drum speed, wDo is the drum speed when the brake was first applied and EF Dis iS the energy already dissipated as a fraction of the energy to be dissipated.
13. A rotating dynamometerfor dissipating energy in a brake under test or in a tyre wheel and brake under test substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to and as illustrated in Figures 1-3 or Figure 4 of the acompanying drawings.
14. A dynamometer comprising a drum mounted for rotation and driven by drive means, a test body coupled to the drum for rotation therewith in a fixed velocity relationship, means for deriving the energy absorbed or dissipated by the test body, means for determining the rotational velocity of the drum or body and control means responsive to the energy absorbed or dissipated and to the rotational velocity and operative to supply a control signal to the drive means to maintain the energy absorbed or dissipated as a predetermined function of the drum speed.
GB08420741A 1983-11-11 1984-08-15 Dynamometers Expired GB2149520B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US06/667,028 US4577497A (en) 1983-11-11 1984-11-01 Dynamometers

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB838330217A GB8330217D0 (en) 1983-11-11 1983-11-11 Dynamometers

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB8420741D0 GB8420741D0 (en) 1984-09-19
GB2149520A true GB2149520A (en) 1985-06-12
GB2149520B GB2149520B (en) 1987-06-10

Family

ID=10551658

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB838330217A Pending GB8330217D0 (en) 1983-11-11 1983-11-11 Dynamometers
GB08420741A Expired GB2149520B (en) 1983-11-11 1984-08-15 Dynamometers

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB838330217A Pending GB8330217D0 (en) 1983-11-11 1983-11-11 Dynamometers

Country Status (2)

Country Link
JP (1) JPS60166838A (en)
GB (2) GB8330217D0 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0336572A2 (en) * 1988-03-31 1989-10-11 Automotive Products Plc Brake testing
WO2000009982A1 (en) * 1998-08-13 2000-02-24 Schenck Pegasus Gmbh Method and device for taking into account friction losses during the simulation of masses on stationary test benches
CN110243612A (en) * 2019-06-21 2019-09-17 武汉轻工大学 Vehicle braking drags detection device

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1308654A (en) * 1969-08-28 1973-02-21 Fav Srl Test-bed for motor vehicles
GB1349713A (en) * 1970-03-31 1974-04-10 Suntester Ltd Vehicle testing apparatus

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1308654A (en) * 1969-08-28 1973-02-21 Fav Srl Test-bed for motor vehicles
GB1349713A (en) * 1970-03-31 1974-04-10 Suntester Ltd Vehicle testing apparatus

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0336572A2 (en) * 1988-03-31 1989-10-11 Automotive Products Plc Brake testing
EP0336572A3 (en) * 1988-03-31 1990-05-23 Automotive Products Plc Brake testing
WO2000009982A1 (en) * 1998-08-13 2000-02-24 Schenck Pegasus Gmbh Method and device for taking into account friction losses during the simulation of masses on stationary test benches
US6577973B1 (en) 1998-08-13 2003-06-10 Schenk Pegasus Gmbh Method and device for taking into account friction losses during the simulation of masses on stationary test benches
CN110243612A (en) * 2019-06-21 2019-09-17 武汉轻工大学 Vehicle braking drags detection device

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB8330217D0 (en) 1983-12-21
JPS60166838A (en) 1985-08-30
GB2149520B (en) 1987-06-10
GB8420741D0 (en) 1984-09-19

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4442708A (en) Automatic driver system
JPS59160720A (en) Method and device for detecting weight of car
US5549371A (en) Braking force controller and control method for electric car
US4577497A (en) Dynamometers
GB2151320A (en) Method for the generation of a vehicle reference speed as a reference value for the control of wheel slip under braking and/or traction loads
JPH11278235A (en) Slip ratio slide resistance control device using speed reference generated in micro slip ratio
EP3241712A1 (en) Speed control device for electric vehicle
JPWO2015111341A1 (en) Driving force control device for electric vehicle
JPH07165054A (en) Method for limiting braking pressure and for determining standard speed
EP0356067A2 (en) Weighing vehicles
GB2149520A (en) Dynamometers
US3962914A (en) Motor vehicle brake test apparatus and method
JP2777944B2 (en) Inspection method of various control functions of automobile
US3955410A (en) Method for measuring a driving power by means of an induction motor
JPH06500973A (en) Braking by deceleration control
WO2007067098A1 (en) Method for testing an aerodrome pavement friction
EP3470317B1 (en) Power control method and apparatus, vehicle and computer storage medium
US3649083A (en) Antiskid device
US3722269A (en) Tire and brake test device
JP2001138888A (en) Control method and device for driving unit of vehicle
JPH11103507A (en) Speed controller for car
JPH05112233A (en) Brake control method
JPS6114450B2 (en)
JP3788278B2 (en) Brake tester control system
SU1012072A1 (en) Vehicle testing stand

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19950815