DocumentCode
1704543
Title
Influence of road camber on motorcycle stability
Author
Evangelou, Simos ; Tomas-Rodriguez, Maria
Author_Institution
Electr. & Electron. & Mech. Eng., Imperial Coll. London, London
fYear
2008
Firstpage
231
Lastpage
236
Abstract
This paper studies the influence of road camber on the stability of single-track road vehicles. Road camber changes the magnitude and direction of the tire force and moment vectors relative to the wheels, as well as the combined-force limit one might obtain from the road tires. Camber-induced changes in the tire force and moment systems have knock-on consequences for the vehicle´s stability. In order to study camber-induced stability trends for a range of machine speeds and roll angles, we study the machine dynamics as the vehicle travels over the surface of a right circular cone. Conical road surfaces allow the machine to operate at a constant steady-state speed, a constant roll angle and a constant road camber angle. The results show that at low speed both the weave- and wobble-mode stability is at a maximum when the machine is perpendicular to the road surface. This trend is reversed at high speed, since the weave- and wobble-mode damping is minimized by running conditions in which the wheels are orthogonal to the road. As a result, positive camber, which is often introduced by road builders to aid drainage and enhance the friction limit of four-wheeled vehicle tires, might be detrimental to the stability of two-wheeled machines.
Keywords
damping; mechanical stability; motorcycles; roads; tyres; vehicle dynamics; wheels; conical road surfaces; constant road camber angle; constant roll angle; machine dynamics; moment vectors; motorcycle stability; single-track road vehicles; tire force; vehicle stability; weave mode damping; wheels; wobble-mode damping; Adhesives; Frequency; Motorcycles; Predictive models; Road vehicles; Stability; Steady-state; Tires; Vehicle dynamics; Wheels;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications, Control and Signal Processing, 2008. ISCCSP 2008. 3rd International Symposium on
Conference_Location
St Julians
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1687-5
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-1688-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISCCSP.2008.4537225
Filename
4537225
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