ghost406 wrote:Hi thank you for the answer,
you mean load cell and upright displacement to calculate the heat in the tyre.
the best thing is to do it for each cycle of the run and after you make a mean of the values?
Actually, the calculation can be implemented in the frequency domain. It is then possible to present the results in several ways, depending on what is of interest.
Here is a useful (if distorted), presentation that contains response functions of work done for tyres, dampers & D/F actuators as a percentage of the overall energy input during a "heave" sweep. The legends contain numerical values extracted at a nominated frequency (5.273 Hz. in this case). The functions are distorted because energy input is not constant (it is small at both low & high frequencies).
The plot is useful because it showed (in this case) that the vehicle had a good structural integrity for frequencies below, say, 12 Hz. It was not so good at higher frequencies because the sprung mass was no longer a monolith (components such a radiators & driver ballast started to go their own ways). Interestingly, perhaps, strapping a real driver into the vehicle (not something I would recommend) demonstrated that, without realizing it, he "worked" with the vehicle to reduce the energy dissipated by the dampers - a mobile mass damper.
Actually, the structural integrity of the particular vehicle shown was very good. That is not always the case, however, and the plot referenced will highlight deficiencies very clearly. The plot also highlights deficiencies in the down force actuators - the rear actuator was in need of a service in this case...