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A Laboratory Excitation Technique to Test Road Bike Vibration Transmission

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Lépine, J 
Champoux, Y 
Drouet, J-M 

Abstract

This paper describes a technique designed to measure the in-situ acceleration signals that will be used to drive a road simulator in the study of road bike vibration transmission in a laboratory setting. To measure the signals, a bike mounted by a cyclist and towed by a motor vehicle is used. A road simulator using actuators driven by a digital signal is described. The impulse response of the bike used to measure road data is convoluted with the road acceleration in order to obtain the required actuator signal. The reproduction capacity of the simulator is evaluated by comparing the frequency content as well as the time statistical parameters of the acceleration signal measurement with road to the acceleration obtained on the simulator. On a granular road with a broadband excitation spectrum, the vertical excitation obtained with the simulator adequately mimics the measured road acceleration. This technique can be used to compare vibration transmission characteristics among different road bikes.

Description

Keywords

road excitation, bicycle dynamics, road vibration measurement, vibration replication

Journal Title

Experimental Techniques

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0732-8818

Volume Title

40

Publisher

Springer Nature
Sponsorship
The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support from the National Science and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC) and the participation of Cervélo and Vroomen-White Design.