smurf40
Mechanical
- Mar 13, 2003
- 7
I ’m looking into the situation where a vehicle has run over at speed (approx 60kmh) debris lying on the road with respect to accelerations the driver may experience.
The worst scenario as I see it could be the driver has braked as hard as possible causing the vehicle to compress fully the front suspension before impact.
The debri in question is a tire from another vehicle involved in a previous crash.
I don’t believe most of the vehicle crash simulation programs are able to simulate this situation accurately as firstly they use a single stiffness/damping value (assumed linear) for each wheels suspension.
I have read other threads regarding potholes/curb impacts and can see this is not a trivial exercise to calculate.
What I am looking for is perhaps some general statistics from actual physical pothole/curb tests indicating the range of accelerations a passenger could expect to experience in such a case.
Could I perhaps estimate (assuming full compression of the suspension) the displacement path of the front axle on the wheel that impacts the tire on the road and from this calculate accelerations at the position where the driver is seated. This will not however take into consideration any deformation occurring in the main structure of the vehicle which may dampen the final acceleration the driver may experience.
The worst scenario as I see it could be the driver has braked as hard as possible causing the vehicle to compress fully the front suspension before impact.
The debri in question is a tire from another vehicle involved in a previous crash.
I don’t believe most of the vehicle crash simulation programs are able to simulate this situation accurately as firstly they use a single stiffness/damping value (assumed linear) for each wheels suspension.
I have read other threads regarding potholes/curb impacts and can see this is not a trivial exercise to calculate.
What I am looking for is perhaps some general statistics from actual physical pothole/curb tests indicating the range of accelerations a passenger could expect to experience in such a case.
Could I perhaps estimate (assuming full compression of the suspension) the displacement path of the front axle on the wheel that impacts the tire on the road and from this calculate accelerations at the position where the driver is seated. This will not however take into consideration any deformation occurring in the main structure of the vehicle which may dampen the final acceleration the driver may experience.