kosheboy
Mechanical
- Oct 10, 2013
- 10
Ok, we have come up with a hydraulic suspension system for HiRailed truck, the suspension is needed to allow for twist in the rail network, and for any bad joints in the rail
I am struggling with one issue, that is thermal expansion of the gas and the affect this will have on ride height, and whether we have enough stroke for the suspension to do its thing, as well as allowing for a ride height change due to thermal expansion of the accumulator gas
Let’s say we set the accumulator up so that it balances the weight of the truck at mid stroke of the ram on a 20° day, say the day gets hotter and with the suspension working for a time the temp of the nitrogen in the accumulator increases to 40°
This will expand the gas in the accumulator and as a result the truck will rise, but as the truck rises it take more effort to lift (due to design)
How can I factor in the two variable to work out how much the truck will rise, & therefore how much extra stroke I need to allow for this (and meet the min twist requirements)
We have
D1 = 0, Ram position (Ride height) at 20°
D2, Ram position after pressure increase (due to temp increase)
V1, volume of accumulator gas at ride height
P1, pressure at ride height @ 20°
P2, pressure due to increase in temp (20° increase)
Can someone help with this
I can crunch the number just fine, but finding the right formula is my problem
Best regards Brendon
I am struggling with one issue, that is thermal expansion of the gas and the affect this will have on ride height, and whether we have enough stroke for the suspension to do its thing, as well as allowing for a ride height change due to thermal expansion of the accumulator gas
Let’s say we set the accumulator up so that it balances the weight of the truck at mid stroke of the ram on a 20° day, say the day gets hotter and with the suspension working for a time the temp of the nitrogen in the accumulator increases to 40°
This will expand the gas in the accumulator and as a result the truck will rise, but as the truck rises it take more effort to lift (due to design)
How can I factor in the two variable to work out how much the truck will rise, & therefore how much extra stroke I need to allow for this (and meet the min twist requirements)
We have
D1 = 0, Ram position (Ride height) at 20°
D2, Ram position after pressure increase (due to temp increase)
V1, volume of accumulator gas at ride height
P1, pressure at ride height @ 20°
P2, pressure due to increase in temp (20° increase)
Can someone help with this
I can crunch the number just fine, but finding the right formula is my problem
Best regards Brendon