Vehicle Body Engineering
Vehicle Body Engineering
Vehicle Body Engineering
Cars can come in a large variety of different body styles. Some are still in production,
while others are of historical interest only. These styles are largely (though not
completely) independent of a car's classification in terms of price, size and intended broad
market; the same car model might be available in multiple body styles (or model ranges).
For some of the following terms, especially relating to four-wheel drive / SUV models
and minivan / MPV models, the distinction between body style and classification is
particularly narrow.
Please note that while each body style has a historical and technical definition, in
common usage such definitions are often blurred. Over time, the common usage of each
term evolves. For example, people often call 4-passenger sport coups a "sports car",
while purists will insist that a sports car by definition is limited to two-place vehicles.
Body work
In automotive engineering, the bodywork of an automobile is the structure which
protects:
The occupants
In vehicles with a separate frame or chassis, the term bodywork is normally applied to
only the non-structural panels, including doors and other movable panels, but it may also
be used more generally to include the structural components which support the
mechanical components.
Construction
There are three main types of automotive bodywork:
The first automobiles were designs adapted in large part from horse-drawn
carriages, and had body-on-frame construction with a wooden frame and wooden
or metal body panels. Wooden-framed motor vehicles remain in production to this
day, with many of the cars made by the Morgan Motor Company still having
wooden structures underlying their bodywork.
A steel chassis or ladder frame replaced the wooden frame. This form of body-onframe construction is still common for commercial vehicles.
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integrated with the metal body. It provides support to all the mechanical
components, as well as protection for the vehicle occupants. Although there is no
separate complete frame or chassis, many monocoque/unibody designs now often
include subframes. Steel monocoque construction is now the most common form
of car bodywork, although aluminum and carbon fiber may also be used.
Less common types include tube frame and space frame designs used for highperformance cars. There have also been various hybrids, for example the Volkswagen
Beetle had a chassis, consisting of the floor pan, door sills and central tunnel, but this
chassis relied on the stiffening provided by the bodywork, a technique sometimes called
semi-monocoque construction.
Non-structural body panels have been made of wood, steel, aluminum, fiberglass and
several more exotic materials.
Body styles
There are several common car body styles:
Enclosed:
Hardtop
Coup
2+2
Notchback
Limousine
Roadster
Stanhope body
Touring car
Town car
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Sedan delivery
Hearse
Hatchback
Liftback
Combi coup
Other:
Crossover
Minivan
Coupe Utility
Sedan (Saloon)
A sedan car or saloon car is a passenger car with two rows of seats and adequate
passenger space in the rear compartment for adult passengers. The vehicle usually has a
separate rear trunk for luggage, although some manufacturers such as Chevrolet, Tatra,
and Volkswagen have made rear-engined models. It is one of the most common body
styles for modern automobiles, and is often marketed at families under the rubric of
family sedan.
1 Types of sedan
Types of sedan
A sedan seats four or more people and has a fixed roof that is full-height up to the rear
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window. The roof structure will typically have a fixed "B" pillar on sedan models. Most
commonly it is a four-door; two-door models are rare, but they do occur (more so
historically).
Notchback sedans
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Two-door sedans
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Convertible
Jaguar XK8 c. 2008, with heatable glass rear window and fully automatic cloth top with
integral top-concealing rigid tonneau
A convertible is a type of automobile in which the roof can retract and fold away,
converting it from an enclosed to an open-air vehicle. Many different automobile body
styles are manufactured and marketed in convertible form.
Roof designs vary widely, but a few characteristics are common to all convertibles. Roofs
are affixed to the body of the vehicle and are usually not detachable. Instead the roof is
hinged and folds away, either into a recess behind the rear seats or into the boot or trunk
of the vehicle. The roof may operate either manually or automatically via hydraulic or
electrical actuators; the roof itself may be constructed of soft or rigid material. Soft-tops
are made of vinyl, canvas or other textile material; hard-top convertibles have roofs made
from steel, aluminum, carbon fiber or plastic materials.
Contemporary convertibles are known and marketed under several different terms due to
the convergence of body styles over the years. A soft-top convertible may also be referred
to as a cabriolet or cabrio or spyder, although two-seater soft tops often retain the name
roadster, referring to their body style.
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diminished rear visibility, from a large roof structure, small rear window, or
obstructed rear window or all of these: e.g., MINI convertible.
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compromises, namely mechanical complexity, expense and more often than not, reduced
luggage capacity.
Construction
Retractable hardtops can vary in material (steel, plastic or aluminum), can vary from two
to five in the number of rigid sections and often rely on complex dual-hinged trunk
(British: boot) lids that enable the trunk lid to both receive the retracting top from the
front and also receive parcels or luggage from the rear along with complex trunk
divider mechanisms to prevent loading of luggage that would conflict with the operation
of the hardtop.
The retractable hardtop convertible trades higher initial cost, mechanical complexity and,
with rare exception, diminished trunk space for increased acoustic insulation,
durability and break-in protection similar to that of a fixed roof coupe.
The retractable hardtop eliminates:
Limousine
A black Lincoln Town Car "stretch" limousine at a car show in Bristol, England
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The backseat of a Town Car, the most common chauffeured car in the US.
A limousine is a luxury vehicle, especially one with a lengthened wheelbase or driven by
a chauffeur. The chassis of a limousine may have been extended by the manufacturer or
by an independent coachbuilder. These are referred to as "stretch" limousines and are
traditionally black or white in color. Limousines are usually liveried vehicles, driven by
professional chauffeurs. As the most expensive form of automobile ground transportation,
limousines are culturally associated with extreme wealth or power, and are commonly
cited as an example of conspicuous consumption. Among the less wealthy, limousines are
also often hired during special events (most commonly weddings and funerals).
Limousine types
The limousine body style has a divider separating the driver from the rear passenger
compartment. This partition usually contains a sliding (often soundproof) glass window
so that conversations between passengers in the rear compartment may be kept private
from the chauffeur. Communication with the driver is possible either by opening the
window in the partition or by using an intercom system.
Traditional
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needed. Usually then two "jump seats" are mounted, facing rearward behind the driver.
These seats fold up when not in use. In this way, up to five persons can be carried in the
aft compartment in comfort, and up to two additional persons carried in the driver's
compartment, for a total capacity of seven passengers in addition to the driver.
Modern limousines
Maybach 62
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A Lada "limousine" in Trinidad, Cuba. This car and the Trabant below fall more into the
category of 'shuttle' than an actual luxury limousine.
Another type of vehicle modified for multiple passenger use is the motorized stage,
applied to the same tasks as the earlier stagecoach. It is not considered a true limousine
but rather in its design and application is between a sedan and a bus. While a bus will
have a central interior aisle for access to seating, a stage has multiple doors that allow
access to transverse forward facing seats. Examples of the type were constructed not only
from sedans (e.g., Chrysler New Yorker, Cadillac DeVille), but also from station wagons;
many of the station wagon conversions sported a large rack, running the length of the
roof, for carrying the passengers' baggage.
This type of vehicle was once rather common in some locations. An example of its use
was in the transport of travelers arriving by railroad at Merced, California to travel to
Yosemite National Park in the first half of the 20th century and at other remote parks. In
Yosemite, passengers would then stay in rustic platform tent camps or more expensive
lodges and hike or rent bicycles for movement around the park. In Glacier National Park,
the stages were referred to as "Jammers" in reference to the nickname of their gearjamming drivers.
A modern version of the stage is seen in some novelty stretch Hummer or Hummer H2
vehicles. Some funeral homes maintain six-door stages to carry the family of the deceased
between the church and the cemetery. These are usually not used for private hire.
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Exotic limousines
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Trabant limousine
Sometimes an "inappropriate" vehicle is converted, simply for the novelty. Hummer
vehicles have been converted. Another novelty conversion is the East German Trabant
which was designed for a low manufacturing cost and incorporated body panels made
from a rag fiber and plastic resin material. Volkswagen Beetles, Fiat Pandas and Citroen
2CV vehicles are occasionally stretched into limousines.
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"Break" respectively.
Description
Most station wagons are modified sedan-type car bodies, having the main interior area
extended to the near-vertical rear window over what would otherwise be the trunk (boot)
of the sedan version. Many are placed on a longer wheelbase to increase the boot
capacity. A hatchback car, although meeting a similar description, would not enjoy the
full height of the passenger cabin all the way to the back; the rear glass of a hatchback
being sloped further from vertical, and the hatch tending not to reach fully to the rear
bumper, as it commonly would in a station wagon. Station wagons also have side
windows over the cargo area, whereas some hatchbacks have thick "C" pillars and no
cargo area windows.
The rear door is usually top-hinged, but on many four-wheel drive-style vehicles it is
side-hinged. The original Range Rover, and a few traditional sedan-based wagons, have a
horizontally split two-piece rear door rather than a single hatch. The Morris Minor and
Mini Travellers, amongst other examples, have a vertically split pair of doors at the rear.
The popularity of the minivan in the 1980s, sport utility vehicles in the mid-1990s, and
crossovers in the 2000s is credited with the decline of the traditional station wagon in
North America.
TYPES:
All-steel wagons
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This modified MG ZT-T became the world's fastest estate/station wagon in 2003.[17]
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height rear door supported on gas struts, and a few also have a rear window that can be
swung upward independently to load small items without opening the whole liftgate.
Historically, however, many different designs have been used for access to the rear of car;
the following summary concentrates on American models.
In the early 1950s, tailgates with hand-cranked roll-down rear windows began to
appear. This was another innovation first seen on Rambler wagons.[18] Later in the
decade, electric power was applied to the tailgate window it could be operated
from the driver's seat, as well as by the keyhole in the rear door. By the early
1960s, this arrangement was becoming common on both full-size and compact
wagons.
A side hinged tailgate that opened like a door was offered on three-seat wagons by
American Motors to make it easier for the back row passengers to enter and exit
their rear-facing seats. This was later supplanted by the dual-hinged tailgate.
The Studebaker Wagonaire station wagon had a unique retractable rear roof
section as well as a conventional rear tailgate which folded down. This allowed it
to carry tall objects that would not fit otherwise. Water leaks, body flex and noise
prevented the innovation from being adopted by other manufacturers. The concept
was reintroduced in 2003 on GMC's mid-size Envoy XUV SUV, but did not last
long on that vehicle either.
The 196472 Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser and 196469 Buick Sport Wagon featured
raised rooflines beginning above the second-row seat and continuing all the way
to the rear tailgate. Above the second seat were plexiglas skylights in which
passengers could view the outside from overhead. On the three-seat models of
these wagons, the third seat faced forward as did the first and second seats, unlike
the normal practice of three-seat wagons at the time in which the rearmost seat
faced the rear.
Ford's full-size wagons for 1966 took the conventional tailgate and disappearing
window a step further. The rear section was made to open either downwards like a
regular tailgate, or like a door, outward from the curb side. The window had to be
retracted for either operation. This was called the "Magic Doorgate". For 1969,
Ford made another innovation by allowing the glass to stay up when the door was
opened sideways, thus creating the "Three-Way Magic Doorgate" (engineered by
Donald N. Frey[19] ). This versatile style quickly caught on and became a fixture
on full-size and intermediate wagons from GM, Ford, and Chrysler. GM,
however, added a notch in the rear bumper that acted as a step plate; to fill the
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gap, a small portion of bumper was attached to the doorgate. When opened as a
swinging door, this part of the bumper moved away, allowing the depression in
the bumper to provide a "step" to ease entry; when the gate was opened by being
lowered or raised to a closed position, the chrome section remained in place
making the bumper "whole".
As the 1970s progressed, the need for lighter weight to meet fuel economy
standards led to a simplified, one-piece liftgate on several models, particularly
smaller wagons, such as is commonly seen on SUVs today. On the same principle,
and quite ironically, the last generation of GM's full-size wagons returned to the
upward-lifting rear window as had been used in the 1940s.
In recent years, the Citron C5 wagon features an upward-lifting full-height fullwidth rear door, where the window on the rear door can be opened independently
from the rear door itself. The window is also opened upwards and is held on gas
struts. The Renault Laguna II estate chassis has a similar arrangement.
Early models of the Range-Rover had a hinging number plate attached to the
lower part of the split rear door. When the lower part was folded down the plate
hung down to remain readable. This was deleted on later models but the split
tailgate remains to this day
Racing Cars
Auto racing
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TYPES:
Single-seater racing
Modern Formula One car: McLaren MP4-24. Heikki Kovalainen testing at the Circuito
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de Jerez, 2009
In single-seater (open-wheel) the wheels are not covered, and the cars often have aerofoil
wings front and rear to produce downforce and enhance adhesion to the track. In Europe
and Asia, open wheeled racing is commonly referred to as "Formula", with appropriate
hierarchical suffixes. In North America, the "Formula" terminology is not followed (with
the exception of F1). The sport is usually arranged to follow an "international" format
(such as F1), a "regional" format (such as the Formula 3 Euro Series), or a "domestic", or
country-specific format (such as the German Formula 3 championship, or the British
Formula Ford).
The best-known variety of single-seater racing, Formula One, involves an annual World
Championship for drivers and constructors
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Touring car racing is a style of road racing that is run with production derived race cars. It
often features full-contact racing due to the small speed differentials and large grids.
sports car racing
The Audi R8 was one of the most successful sports prototypes ever made, seen here at
Road Atlanta.
In sports car racing, production derived versions of sports cars also known as grand
tourers (GTs), and purpose built sports prototype cars compete within their respective
classes on closed circuits.
Sports prototypes, unlike GT cars, do not rely on road legal cars as a base. They are
closed wheel and often closed cockpit purpose built race cars intended mainly for
endurance racing. They have much lower weight and more down force compared to GT
cars making them much faster.
Famous sports car races include the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the 24 Hours of Daytona, 24
Hours of Spa-Franchorchamps, the 12 Hours of Sebring, and the 1,000-mile (1,600 km)
Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta. There is also the 24 Hours of the Nrburgring on the
infamous Nordschleife track and the Dubai 24 Hour which is aimed at GT3 and below
cars with a mixture of professional and pro-am drivers.
Stock car racing
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A Toyota MR2 , driven by Adam Spence in the 2006 Targa Tasmania prologue stage.
Targa is a tarmac-based road rally which is run all around the world. This began with the
Targa Florio.
Off-road racing
In off-road racing, various classes of specially modified vehicles, including cars, compete
in races through off-road environments. In North America these races often take place in
the desert, such as the famous Baja 1000. In Europe, "offroad" refers to events such as
autocross or rallycross, while desert races and rally-raids such as the Paris-Dakar, Master
Rallye or European "bajas" are called "cross-country rallies."
Kart racing
A sprint kart race in Atwater California hosted by the International Karting Federation.
Although often seen as the entry point for serious racers into the sport, kart racing, or
karting, can be an economical way for amateurs to try racing and is also a fully fledged
international sport in its own right.
Sports car
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Overview
Sports cars can be either luxurious or spartan, but driving and mechanical performance is
requisite. Many drivers regard brand name and the subsequent racing reputation and
history as important indications of sporting quality (for example, Porsche, Lotus, or
Ferrari), but some exotic car brands, such as Lamborghini, which do not race or build
racing cars, are also highly regarded by sports car enthusiasts.
Sportcar description
An important sports feature on the Skelta G-Force is that it is made of carbon fiber,
making it ultra-light.
A sports car does not require a large, powerful engine, though many do have them. Many
classic British sports cars lacked powerful engines, but were known for exceptional
handling due to light weight; a well-engineered, balanced chassis; and modern suspension
(for example, Lotus Seven, Austin 7 Speedy). On tight, twisting roads, such a sports car
may perform more effectively than a heavier, more powerful car.
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Layout
1990s Lotus Elan M100, a front-engine, front wheel (FF) drive sports car
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performance sports car manufacturers, such as Ferrari and Lamborghini prefer this layout.
Porsche is one of the few remaining manufacturers using the rear-engine, rear-wheel
drive layout (RR). The motor's distributed weight across the wheels, in a Porsche 911,
provides excellent traction, but the significant mass behind the rear wheels makes it more
prone to oversteer in some situations. Porsche has continuously refined the design and in
recent years added electronic driving aids (i.e. computerised traction-stability control) to
counteract these inherent design shortcomings.
Some sport cars have used the front-engine, front-wheel drive layout (FF), e.g. Fiat
Barchetta, Saab Sonett and Berkeley cars. This layout is advantageous for small, light,
lower power sports cars, as it avoids the extra weight, increased transmission power loss,
and packaging problems of a long driveshaft and longitudinal engine of FR vehicles. Yet,
its conservative handling effect, particularly under steer, and the fact that many drivers
believe rear wheel drive is a more desirable layout for a sports car make this layout
atypical to high-performance sports cars.
Seating
Some sports cars have small back seats that are really only suitable for luggage or small
children. Such a configuration is often referred to as a 2+2 (two full seats + two
"occasional" seats).
Over the years, some manufacturers of sports cars have sought to increase the practicality
of their vehicles by increasing the seating room. One method is to place the driver's seat
in the center of the car, which allows two full-sized passenger seats on each side and
slightly behind the driver. The arrangement was originally considered for the
Lamborghini Miura, but abandoned as impractical because of the difficulty for the driver
to enter/exit the vehicle. McLaren used the design in their F1.
Another British manufacturer, TVR, took a different approach in their Cerbera model.
The interior was designed in such a way that the dashboard on the passenger side swept
toward the front of the car, which allowed the passenger to sit farther forward than the
driver. This gave the rear seat passenger extra room and made the arrangement suitable
for three adult passengers and one child seated behind the driver.
DRIVERS VISIBILITY:
In transport, driver visibility is the maximum distance at which the driver of a vehicle
can see and identify prominent objects around the vehicle. [1] Visibility is primarily
determined by weather conditions (see visibility) and by a vehicle's design. [2] The parts
of a vehicle that influence visibility include the windshield, the dashboard and the pillars.
Good driver visibility is essential to safe road traffic.
Blind spots may occur in the front of the driver when the A-pillar (also called the
windshield pillar), side-view mirror, and interior rear-view mirror block a driver's view of
the road. Behind the driver, there are additional pillars, headrests, passengers, and cargo,
that may reduce visibility. Blind spots are affected directed by vehicular speed, since they
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impossible to design an aerodynamic small car with a vertical A-pillar because the more
vertical the A-pillar is, the less space the door opening has, and the greater frontal area
and coefficient of drag the vehicle will have.
Examples of cars with an almost vertical A-pillar:
Saab 900
School bus
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Other traffic can not see the driver through the reflection if the driver can see
them.
The heater needs more time to heat the bigger window surface.
The flat windshield angle does not let snow slide off easily.
The driver cannot reach the whole flat window to clean it easily.
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A small dashboard gives some reflection on the lower part of the windshield.
A big dashboard can give reflection on eye height.
4. 2. A-pillar reflection
It is best if the inside of the A-pillar has a non-reflecting dark colored surface. [3]
If the side of the window is curved there is less A-pillar reflection. [4]
4. 3. Light through roof reflection
Some new model cars have a very big roof-window. Sometimes the sunlight through the
roof lights up the dashboard and gives a reflection in the windshield.
5. Other automobile design factors
Other design factors may prevent a manufacturer from maximizing visibility. These
include safety, as narrower pillars cannot be made strong as easily as thicker pillars, and
size restraints pertaining to aerodynamics, as taller, more vertical windshields create
additional drag and reduce fuel efficiency.
6. Rear-view mirror blind spots
A vehicular blind spot is the area of the road that while driving cannot be seen when
looking forward or through either the rear-view or side mirrors. Blind spots can be
checked by turning one's head briefly, eliminated by reducing overlap between side and
rear-view mirrors, or reduced by adding other mirrors with larger fields-of-view.
Detection of vehicles or other objects in blind spots may also be aided by systems such as
video cameras or distance sensors, though these are uncommon or expensive options in
automobiles generally sold to the public.
A blind spot in a vehicle are areas around the vehicle that cannot be directly observed
under existing circumstances. [1] Blind spots exist in a wide range of vehicles: cars,
trucks, motorboats and aircraft.
Motor vehicles
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VISIBILITY TESTS:
(1)Reversing visibility test procedure
The test procedure consists of the following:
a test cyclinder to represent the shoulder height of an average 2 year old child,
and
The laser is directed through the rear window of each vehicle. The position where the
laser is visible on the test cyclinder is noted. This procedure is repeated for all positions
on the grid. The results are analysed and an overall score is given. The best scores are
awarded to the vehicles which have the most effective rear visibility.
A low star rating car means a driver looking out the rear window is less likely to see an
object of child height, compared to a car with a better star rating. The more stars the
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better.
In general, reversing sensors improve the rating by half a star.
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car takes this into account. The ratio of the screen to pillar areas is the critical vision
area of the windscreen divided by the left and right pillar areas added together. The
higher this value is, the better the score the car will receive.
Although only the screen-to-pillar ratio determines the final score, weve also scrutinised
the area of the drivers field of view that is obscured by the pillars, measured in metres
squared. This area is projected forward to 23 metres in front of the car the Highway
Code stopping distance at 30mph.
Pillars can obscure a frighteningly wide area - the thickest A-pillars can easily obscure a
whole car at a distance of 23 metres.
Laser Measuring
A system for improving the visibility in vehicles, including the following: an
illumination optical system (2) for continuous radiation of infrared pulsed light;
an associated receiver optical system (3) for receiving reflected components of the
radiated light; a display (4) for representing information obtained by the receiver
optical system (3), and a device (5, 6) for determining the presence of glare in the
receiver optical system (3) from a foreign vehicle illumination optical system and
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for changing the keying interval or duty cycle of the infrared pulsed light of the
illumination optical system (2) driven with fixed keying interval in dependence
upon the vehicle direction of travel in such a manner that the glare is eliminated.
Therein the illumination optical system is driven is driven with a fixed keying
interval depending upon the vehicle direction of travel or, in certain cases, the
direction of illumination. In an alternative embodiment, the illumination optical
system (2) is operated at a wavelength which depends upon the vehicle direction
of travel or, in certain cases, the direction of illumination.
Representative Image:
Patent Research
The invention concerns a device for improving the view in vehicles, in particular at night,
bad weather and fog. In the process images of actual traffic scenes are recorded by a
camera (2), which is sensitive outside the visible spectrum, and these images are
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reproduced in the visible spectrum in the vehicle via a display optic (6). According to the
invention the type of object which is contained in a traffic scene recorded by the camera
(2) is automatically classified according to type, and depending upon the type of the
recognized object it is reproduced on the display optic (6) in an intensity and/or color,
which corresponds to the intensity and/or color which the associated object typically has
by daylight. The process facilitates the recognition by the vehicle operator of images of
traffic scenes recorded outside the visible spectrum.
Representative Image:
Automobile safety
Automobile safety is the study and practice of vehicle design, construction, and
equipment to minimize the occurrence and consequences of automobile accidents. (Road
traffic safety more broadly includes roadway design.)
Improvements in roadway and automobile designs have steadily reduced injury and death
rates in all first world countries. Nevertheless, auto collisions are the leading cause of
injury-related deaths, an estimated total of 1.2 million in 2004, or 25% of the total from
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all causes. Risk compensation limits the improvement that can be made, often leading to
reduced safety where one might expect the opposite.
Occupational driving
Work-related roadway crashes are the leading cause of death from traumatic injuries in
the U.S. workplace. They accounted for nearly 12,000 deaths between 1992 and 2000.
Deaths and injuries from these roadway crashes result in increased costs to employers and
lost productivity in addition to their toll in human suffering. Truck drivers tend to endure
higher fatality rates than workers in other occupations, but concerns about motor vehicle
safety in the workplace are not limited to those surrounding the operation of large trucks.
Workers outside the motor carrier industry routinely operate company-owned vehicles for
deliveries, sales and repair calls, client visits etc. In these instances, the employer
providing the vehicle generally plays a major role in setting safety, maintenance, and
training policy. As in non-occupational driving, young drivers are especially at risk. In the
workplace, 45% of all fatal injuries to workers under age 18 between 1992 and 2000 in
the United States resulted from transportation incidents.
Active and passive safety
The terms "active" and "passive" are simple but important terms in the world of
automotive safety. "Active safety" is used to refer to technology assisting in the
prevention of a crash and "passive safety" to components of the vehicle (primarily
airbags, seatbelts and the physical structure of the vehicle) that help to protect occupants
during a crash .[4][5]
Crash avoidance
Crash avoidance systems and devices help the driver and, increasingly, help the
vehicle itself to avoid a collision. This category includes:
Driver assistance
A subset of crash avoidance is driver assistance systems, which help the driver to detect
ordinarily-hidden obstacles and to control the vehicle. Driver assistance systems include:
Infrared night vision systems to increase seeing distance beyond headlamp range
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Reverse backup sensors, which alert drivers to difficult-to-see objects in their path
when reversing
Backup camera
Adaptive cruise control which maintains a safe distance from the vehicle in front
Traction control systems which restore traction if driven wheels begin to spin
Precrash system
Crashworthiness
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Seatbelts limit the forward motion of an occupant, stretch to slow down the
occupant's deceleration in a crash, and prevent occupants being ejected from the
vehicle.
Airbags inflate to cushion the impact of a vehicle occupant with various parts of
the vehicle's interior.
Crumple zones absorb and dissipate the force of a collision, displacing and
diverting it away from the passenger compartment and reducing the impact force
on the vehicle occupants. Vehicles will include a front, rear and maybe side
crumple zones (like Volvo SIPS) too.
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Padding of the instrument panel and other interior parts of the vehicle likely to be
struck by the occupants during a crash.
Post-crash survivability
Post-crash survivability devices and systems help minimise the chances By using air bags
Pedestrian safety
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It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Crash test dummies in popular culture. (
This article may contain original research. Please improve it by verifying the claims made a
references. Statements consisting only of original research may be removed. More details may be availa
talk page. (February 2010)
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1 Testing
2 Dummy evolution
3 See also
4 Footnotes
5 References
[edit] Testing
On August 31, 1869, Mary Ward became the first recorded victim of a steam-powered
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automobile accident; Karl Benz had not yet invented the gasoline-powered automobile
(1886). Ward, of Parsonstown, Ireland, was thrown out of a motor vehicle and killed.[3]
Thirty years later, on September 13, 1899, Henry Bliss became North America's first
motor vehicle fatality when hit while stepping off a New York City trolley. Since then,
over 20 million people worldwide have died to motor vehicle accidents.
The need for a means of analyzing and mitigating the effects of motor vehicle accidents
on humans was felt soon after commercial production of automobiles began in the late
1890s, and by the 1930s, when the automobile a common part of daily life and the
number of motor vehicle deaths was rising. Death rates had surpassed 15.6 fatalities per
100 million vehicle-miles and were continuing to climb.[citation needed]
In 1930, the interior of a car featured Dashboards of rigid metal, non-collapsible steering
columns and protruding knobs, buttons, and levers. Without seat belts, passengers in a
frontal collision could be hurled against the interior of the automobile or through the
windshield. The vehicle body itself was rigid, and impact forces were transmitted directly
to the vehicle occupants. As late as the 1950s, car manufacturers were on public record as
saying that vehicle accidents simply could not be made survivable because the forces in a
crash were too great.[citation needed]
[edit] Cadaver testing
Detroit's Wayne State University was the first to begin serious work on collecting data on
the effects of high-speed collisions on the human body. In the late 1930s there was no
reliable data on how the human body responds to the sudden, violent forces acting on it in
an automobile accident. Furthermore, no effective tools existed to measure such
responses. Biomechanics was a field barely in its infancy. It was therefore necessary to
employ two types of test subjects in order to develop initial data sets.
The first test subjects were human cadavers. They were used to obtain fundamental
information about the human body's ability to withstand the crushing and tearing forces
typically experienced in a high-speed accident. To such an end, steel ball bearings were
dropped on skulls, and bodies were dumped down unused elevator shafts onto steel
plates. Cadavers fitted with crude accelerometers were strapped into automobiles and
subjected to head-on collisions and vehicle rollovers.
Albert King's 1995 Journal of Trauma article, "Humanitarian Benefits of Cadaver
Research on Injury Prevention", clearly states the value in human lives saved as a result
of cadaver research. King's calculations indicate that as a result of design changes
implemented up to 1987, cadaver research has since saved 8500 lives annually. He notes
that for every cadaver used, each year 61 people survive due to wearing seat belts, 147
live due to air bags, and 68 survive windshield impact.
However, work with cadavers presented almost as many problems as it resolved. Not only
were there the moral and ethical issues related to working with the dead, but there were
also research concerns. The majority of cadavers available were older European
American adults who had died non-violent deaths; they did not represent a demographic
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Additionally, it was important for researchers to be able to determine to what extent cabin
design needed to be modified to ensure optimal survival circumstances. For instance, a
dashboard with too little padding or padding which was too stiff or too soft would not
significantly reduce head injury over a dash with no padding at all. While knobs, levers,
and buttons are essential in the operation of a vehicle, which design modifications would
best ensure that these elements did not tear or puncture victims in a crash. Rear-view
mirror impact is a significant occurrence in a frontal collision; how should a mirror be
built so that it is both rigid enough to perform its task and yet of low injury risk if struck.
While work with cadavers had aroused some opposition, primarily from religious
institutions, it was grudgingly accepted because the dead, being dead, felt no pain, and the
indignity of their situations was directly related to easing the pain of the living. Animal
research, on the other hand, aroused much greater passion. Animal rights groups such as
the ASPCA were vehement in their protest, and while researchers such as Patrick
supported animal testing because of its ability to produce reliable, applicable data, there
was nonetheless a strong ethical unease about this process.
Although animal test data were still more easily obtained than cadaver data, the fact that
animals were not people and the difficulty of employing adequate internal
instrumentation limited their usefulness. Animal testing is no longer practiced by any of
the major automobile makers; General Motors discontinued live testing in 1993 and other
manufacturers followed suit shortly thereafter.
[edit] Dummy evolution
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The mass production of dummies afforded their use in many more applications.
Alderson went on to produce what it called the VIP-50 series, built specifically for
General Motors and Ford, but which was also adopted by the National Bureau of
Standards. Sierra followed up with a competitor dummy, a model it called "Sierra Stan,"
but GM, who had taken over the impetus in developing a reliable and durable dummy,
found neither model satisfied its needs. GM engineers decided to combine the best
features of the VIP series and Sierra Stan, and so in 1971 Hybrid I was born. Hybrid I was
what is known as a "50th percentile male" dummy. That is to say, it modeled an average
male in height, mass, and proportion. The original "Sierra Sam" was a 95th percentile
male dummy (heavier and taller than 95% of human males). In cooperation with the
Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE), GM shared this design, and a subsequent 5th
percentile female dummy, with its competitors.
Since then, considerable work has gone into creating more and more sophisticated
dummies. Hybrid II was introduced in 1972, with improved shoulder, spine, and knee
responses, and more rigorous documentation. Hybrid II became the first dummy to
comply with the American Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) for testing
of automotive lap and shoulder belts. In 1973, a 50th percentile male dummy was
released, and the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA)
NHTSA undertook an agreement with General Motors to produce a model exceeding
Hybrid II's performance in a number of specific areas.[9]
Though a great improvement over cadavers for standardized testing purposes, Hybrid I
and Hybrid II were still very crude, and their use was limited to developing and testing
seat belt designs. A dummy was needed which would allow researchers to explore injuryreduction strategies. It was this need that pushed GM researchers to develop the current
Hybrid line, the Hybrid III family of crash test dummies.
[edit] Hybrid III family
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The original 50th percentile male Hybrid III's family expanded to include a 95th
percentile male, 5th percentile female, and ten, six, and three-year-old child dummies.
Hybrid III, the 50th percentile male dummy which made its first appearance in 1976, is
the familiar crash test dummy, and he is now a family man. If he could stand upright, he
would be 175 cm (5'9") tall and would have a mass of 77 kg (170 lb). He occupies the
driver's seat in all the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) [1] 65 km/h (40 mph)
offset frontal crash tests. He is joined by a "big brother", the 95th percentile Hybrid III, at
188 cm (6 ft 2 in) and 100 kg (223 lb). Ms. Hybrid III is a 5th percentile female dummy,
at a diminutive 152 cm (5 ft) tall and 50 kg (110 lb).[10] The three Hybrid III child
dummies represent a ten year old, 21 kg (47 lb) six year old, and a 15 kg (33 lb) three year
old. The child models are very recent additions to the crash test dummy family; because
so little hard data are available on the effects of accidents on children, and such data are
very difficult to obtain, these models are based in large part on estimates and
approximations. The primary benefit provided by the Hybrid III is improved neck
response in forward flexion and head rotation that better simulates the human.[11]
[edit] Testing procedure
Every Hybrid III undergoes calibration prior to a crash test. Its head is removed and is
dropped from 40 centimetres to test calibrate the head instrumentation. Then the head and
neck are reattached, set in motion, and stopped abruptly to check for proper neck flexure.
Hybrids wear chamois leather skin; the knees are struck with a metal probe to check for
proper puncture. Finally, the head and neck are attached to the body, which is attached to
a test platform and struck violently in the chest by a heavy pendulum to ensure that the
ribs bend and flex as they should.
When the dummy has been determined to be ready for testing, it is dressed entirely in
yellow, marking paint is applied to the head and knees, and calibration marks are fastened
to the side of the head to aid researchers when slow-motion films are reviewed later. The
dummy is then placed inside the test vehicle. Forty-four data channels located in all parts
of the Hybrid III, from the head to the ankle, record between 30 000 and 35 000 data
items in a typical 100150 millisecond crash. Recorded in a temporary data repository in
the dummy's chest, these data are downloaded to computer once the test is complete.
Because the Hybrid is a standardized data collection device, any part of a particular
Hybrid type is interchangeable with any other. Not only can one dummy be tested several
times, but if a part should fail, it can be replaced with a new part. A fully-instrumented
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Hybrid III.
[edit] Future development
This section is written like a personal reflection or essay and may require cleanup. Please help im
rewriting it in an encyclopedic style. (April 2009)
Further development is needed on dummies which can address the concern that, even
though fewer lives are lost, there are still a hundred seriously injured passengers for every
death, and crippling injuries to the legs and feet represent a great percentage of resultant
physical impairments.
One important sector of the traveling public has yet to be represented in mainstream crash
testing pregnant women. The first prototype pregnant crash test dummy has been built
by engineering researchers at Loughborough University UK with the aim of improving
seat belt design. It has a fluid filled container above the pelvis to replicate the foetus and
womb. Belts can be uncomfortable for pregnant women so some choose not to wear
them, reducing their safety at a time when it should be increased. A second pregnant
crash test dummy has been designed by a student at the University of Idaho.
Crash test dummies have provided invaluable data on how human bodies react in crashes
and have contributed greatly to improved vehicle design. While they have saved millions
of lives, like cadavers and animals, they have reached a point of reduced data return.
The largest problem with acquiring data from cadavers, other than their availability, was
that an essential element of standardized testing, repeatability, was impossible. No matter
how many elements from a previous test could be reused, the cadaver had to be different
each time. While modern test dummies have overcome this problem, testers still face
essentially the same problem when it comes to testing the vehicle. A vehicle can be
crashed only once; no matter how carefully the test is done, it cannot be repeated exactly.
A second problem with dummies is that they are and will only ever be approximately
human. Forty-four data channels on a Hybrid III is not even a remote representation of the
number of data channels in a living person. The mimicking of internal organs is crude at
best, a fact that means that even though cadavers and animals are no longer the primary
sources of accident data, they must still be employed in the study of soft tissue injury.[14]
Furthermore, development of devices to simulate individual body systems is
underway.[15]
The future of crash testing has begun at the same place it all started: Wayne State
University. King H. Yang is one of Wayne State's researchers involved in creating
detailed computer models of human systems. The advantage of the computer is that it is
unbound by physical law. A virtual vehicle crashed once can be uncrashed and then
crashed again in a slightly different manner. A virtual back broken can be unbroken, the
seatbelt configuration changed, and the back re-broken. When every variable is
controllable and every event is repeatable, the need for physical experimentation is
greatly reduced.
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At the beginning of the 21st century, legal certification of new car models is still required
to be done using physical dummies in physical vehicles. The next generation of crash test
dummies may perform their tasks entirely on a computer screen.
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Styling
Noise & Vibration
Control and Handling
Fuel Consumption
Drag forces increase exponentially with velocity
More fuel is consumed to counter aerodynamic forces than any other factor
Better air flow management reduces fuel consumption and pollution
Styling
Aerodynamically efficient body surfaces may interfere with the styling
intent
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Aerodynamic Theory
Aerodynamic Factors
Streamlines
Velocity Distribution
Laminar Flow
Turbulent Flow
Viscosity
Reynolds Number
Boundary Layer
Skin Friction Bernoullis Principle
Pitot Tube
Pressure Coefficient
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Streamlines
Curves associated with a pictorial representation of air flow
Smoke is commonly used in wind tunnels to represent the streamlines
Velocity Distribution
The nature of the fluid flow
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Laminar Flow
Fluid motion that is "well organized"
Fluid with parallel velocity vectors
Turbulent Flow
Fluid motion that is not "well organized"
Fluid with parallel and other velocity vectors
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Viscosity
The fluids resistance to motion
Example
What is the force required to pull the upper plate at 5 m/s, if the plate
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area is 2 m2, and the fluid between the surfaces is water with the
separation distance of 0.04 m (waters coef. of viscosity is 1.0x10-3
Ns/m2)
Example
Using the previous diagram and dimensions,
How fast will the upper plate move, if the fluid is SAE 30 motor oil with
the coef. of viscosity of 4.0x10-3 Ns/m2 and an applied force of 2 N
Reynolds Number
Quantifies the product of speed times size
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A dimensionless number
Example
Boundary Layer
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Relative velocity
Example
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Skin Friction
Cf, skin friction coefficient
Non-dimensional
Indicates the level of friction between the vehicles skin and the air
= Friction resistance
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Example
What is the friction resistance ( ) of a plate moving at 30 m/s, with coef.
of friction of 0.002 through air with a density of 1.22 Kg/m3?
= Cf (0.5 V2) = 0.002 x 0.5 x 1.22 x 302
= 1.098 N/m2
Dynamic Pressure
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Bernoullis Principle
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Bernoullis Equation
where, V = velocity, p = local static pressure, and = density, for any
point on a streamline
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Example
Pitot Tube
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Pressure Coefficient
Non-dimensional
Wind Tunnel
Used to study the aerodynamic properties of an object in a stationary
manner
Motion is simulated by moving air (fluid) around the object of interest
Properties measure in wind tunnel include pressures, forces, velocities,
and vibrations
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Expensive
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Ground effect
Tire rotation
Wall interference
Challenges
Model size
The larger, the greater the wall effect
The smaller, the less accurate
Simulation of the moving road
Mounting of model and rotating wheels
Wall effect
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Whatever works satisfactorily in the wind tunnel, will usually work well
on the road
Scale model studies are usually too conservative, and the vehicle can be
further optimized
Vehicle Aerodynamics
Vehicle Aerodynamic Factors
Aerodynamic Forces
Laminar Separation
Tripping of Boundary Layer
Pressure Distribution
Wake
Tires
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Aerodynamic Forces
Lift force
Drag force
Side force
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Force coefficients
Example
What is a vehicles drag force, with a frontal area of 1.5 m2, CD of 0.4, and
traveling at 30 m/s
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Example
Rear Spoiler (Mazda RX-7 R-2)
CD = 0.31 (0.29 without spoiler)
CL front = 0.10 (0.16 without spoiler)
CL rear = 0.08 (0.08 without spoiler)
Underbody improvements
Aerodynamic properties
Reduce drag
Increase down force
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Laminar Separation
Laminar Separation
Flow separation inside the boundary layer
Laminar Bubble
Streamlines enclosed within the laminar separation
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The rear end shape is the most critical factor in lowering the drag
coefficient
Flow separation above the rear window can cause annoying dirt deposits
on the glass
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Pressure Distribution
Helps the placement of inlets and outlets
Lower pressure at the outlet
Higher pressure at the inlet
Favorable pressure distribution
Prevents flow separation
Unfavorable pressure distribution
Promotes flow separation
Promotes turbulent flow within boundary layer
Example of inlet
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Wake
The disturbed air flow left behind the vehicle
Usually in the form of a vortex
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Increases drag
Presents danger to the following vehicles
Tires
Tires influence a vehicles aerodynamic properties
Cross sectional area
Frontal area
Rotation of tires
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Effect of all-wheel-steering
Drag can be reduced by making glass and trim as flush with the body as
possible
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General Improvements
1- Front spoiler
2- Ducted engine cooling
3- Shrouded windshield wiper arms
4- Aerodynamic mirrors
5- Smooth windshield transitions
6- Smooth side window transitions
7- Smooth rear window transition
8- Optimized trunk corner radii
9- Optimized lower rear panel
10 - Smooth fuel tank and underbody
11- Optimized rocker panels
12- Flush wheel covers
13- Elimination of the rain gutter
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Unconventional Features
Large rear fins promote lateral stability in the 1966 Peugeot CD
1969 Chaparral 2J used auxiliary fans to create suction under the car
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Wind tunnel
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A model Cessna with helium-filled bubbles showing streamlines of the wingtip vortices.
A wind tunnel is a research tool used in aerodynamic research. It is used to study the effects of air mo
past solid objects.
Theory of operation
Wind tunnels were first proposed as a means of studying vehicles (primarily airplanes) in
free flight. The wind tunnel was envisioned as a means of reversing the usual paradigm:
instead of the air's standing still and the aircraft moving at speed through it, the same
effect would be obtained if the aircraft stood still and the air moved at speed past it. In
that way a stationary observer could study the aircraft in action, and could measure the
aerodynamic forces being imposed on the aircraft.
Later, wind tunnel study came into its own: the effects of wind on manmade structures or
objects needed to be studied, when buildings became tall enough to present large surfaces
to the wind, and the resulting forces had to be resisted by the building's internal structure.
Determining such forces was required before building codes could specify the required
strength of such buildings.
Still later, wind-tunnel testing was applied to automobiles, not so much to determine
aerodynamic forces per se but more to determine ways to reduce the power required to
move the vehicle on roadways at a given speed. In these studies, the interaction between
the road and the vehicle plays a significant role, and this interaction must be taken into
consideration when interpreting the test results. In an actual situation the roadway is
moving relative to the vehicle but the air is stationary relative to the roadway, but in the
wind tunnel the air is moving relative to the roadway, while the roadway is stationary
relative to the test vehicle. Some automotive-test wind tunnels have incorporated moving
belts under the test vehicle in an effort to approximate the actual condition.
dye, smoke, or bubbles of liquid can be introduced into the airflow upstream of
the test model, and their path around the model can be photographed (see particle
image velocimetry)
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pressures on the test model are usually measured with beam balances, connected
to the test model with beams or strings or cables
pressure distributions across the test model have historically been measured by
drilling many small holes along the airflow path, and using multi-tube
manometers to measure the pressure at each hole
pressure distributions can more conveniently be measured by the use of pressuresensitive paint, in which higher local pressure is indicated by lowered
fluorescence of the paint at that point
pressure distributions can also be conveniently measured by the use of pressuresensitive pressure belts, a recent development in which multiple ultraminiaturized pressure sensor modules are integrated into a flexible strip. The strip
is attached to the aerodynamic surface with tape, and it sends signals depicting the
pressure distribution along its surface.
How it works
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diameter, a single large fan is not practical, and so instead an array of multiple fans are
used in parallel to provide sufficient airflow. Due to the sheer volume and speed of air
movement required, the fans may be powered by stationary turbofan engines rather than
electric motors.
The airflow created by the fans that is entering the tunnel is itself highly turbulent due to
the fan blade motion (when the fan is blowing air into the test section - when it is sucking
air out of the test section downstream, the fan-blade turbulence is not a factor), and so is
not directly useful for accurate measurements. The air moving through the tunnel needs to
be relatively turbulence-free and laminar. To correct this problem, closely-spaced vertical
and horizontal air vanes are used to smooth out the turbulent airflow before reaching the
subject of the testing.
Due to the effects of viscosity, the cross-section of a wind tunnel is typically circular
rather than square, because there will be greater flow constriction in the corners of a
square tunnel that can make the flow turbulent. A circular tunnel provides a smoother
flow.
The inside facing of the tunnel is typically as smooth as possible, to reduce surface drag
and turbulence that could impact the accuracy of the testing. Even smooth walls induce
some drag into the airflow, and so the object being tested is usually kept near the center
of the tunnel, with an empty buffer zone between the object and the tunnel walls. There
are correction factors to relate wind tunnel test results to open-air results.
Lighting is usually recessed into the circular walls of the tunnel and shines in through
windows. If the light were mounted on the inside surface of the tunnel in a conventional
manner, the light bulb would generate turbulence as the air blows around it. Similarly,
observation is usually done through transparent portholes into the tunnel. Rather than
simply being flat discs, these lighting and observation windows may be curved to match
the cross-section of the tunnel and further reduce turbulence around the window.
Various techniques are used to study the actual airflow around the geometry and compare
it with theoretical results, which must also take into account the Reynolds number and
Mach number for the regime of operation.
Pressure measurements
Pressure across the surfaces of the model can be measured if the model includes pressure
taps. This can be useful for pressure-dominated phenomena, but this only accounts for
normal forces on the body.
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Note that the force balance itself creates drag and potential turbulence that will affect the
model and introduce errors into the measurements. The supporting structures are
therefore typically smoothly shaped to minimize turbulence.
Flow visualization
Because air is transparent it is difficult to directly observe the air movement itself.
Instead, multiple methods of both quantitative and qualitative flow visualization methods
have been developed for testing in a wind tunnel.
Qualitative methods
Smoke
Tufts
Tufts are applied to a model and remain attached during testing. Tufts can be used to
gauge air flow patterns and flow separation.
Compilation of images taken during an alpha run starting at 0 degrees alpha ranging to 26
degrees alpha. Images taken at the Kirsten Wind Tunnel using fluorescent mini-tufts.
Notice how separation starts at the outboard wing and progresses inward. Notice also how
there is delayed separation aft of the nacelle.
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Fluorescent mini-tufts attached to a wing in the Kirsten Wind Tunnel showing air flow
direction and separation. Angle of attack ~ 12 degrees, speed ~120 Mph.
Evaporating suspensions
Evaporating suspensions are simply a mixture of some sort or fine powder, talc, or clay
mixed into a liquid with a low latent heat of evaporation. When the wind is turned on the
liquid quickly evaporates leaving behind the clay in a pattern characteristic of the air
flow.
China clay on a wing in the Kirsten Wind Tunnel showing reverse and span-wise flow.
Oil
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When oil is applied to the model surface it can clearly show the transition from laminar to
turbulent flow as well as flow separation.
Oil flow vis on straight wing in the Kirsten Wind Tunnel. Trip dots can be seen near the
leading edge.
Sublimation
If the air movement in the tunnel is sufficiently non-turbulent, a particle stream released
into the airflow will not break up as the air moves along, but stay together as a sharp thin
line. Multiple particle streams released from a grid of many nozzles can provide a
dynamic three-dimensional shape of the airflow around a body. As with the force balance,
these injection pipes and nozzles need to be shaped in a manner that minimizes the
introduction of turbulent airflow into the airstream.
High-speed turbulence and vortices can be difficult to see directly, but strobe lights and
film cameras or high-speed digital cameras can help to capture events that are a blur to
the naked eye.
High-speed cameras are also required when the subject of the test is itself moving at high
speed, such as an airplane propeller. The camera can capture stop-motion images of how
the blade cuts through the particulate streams and how vortices are generated along the
trailing edges of the moving blade.
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urban areas, the single Decker is the standard mode of public
transport bus travel, increasingly with low floor features.
With their origins in van chassis, minibuses are not usually considered
single-deckers, although modern minibus designs blur this distinction.
Minibuses can also be regarded as both included with and separate
from standard single-deckers, in terms of full size length and vehicle
weights, although again design developments have seen this
distinction blurred. Some coach style buses that do not have under
floor luggage space can also be correctly termed as single-deckers,
with some sharing standard bus chassis designs, such as the Volvo
B10M, with a different body style applied.
DOUBLE DECKER BUSA double-decker bus is a bus that has two storeys or decks. Red
double-decker buses are used for mass transit in London. Doubledecker buses are also used in other cities in Europe, Asia, and
former British colonies and protectorates such as Hong Kong,
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www.jntuworld.com || www.android.jntuworld.com || www.jwjobs.net ||
www.android.jwjobs.net
M A QADEER
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Types of commercial
vehicle body
lorry
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covered tru
container tr
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fire truck
wreck truck
tilt truck
tanker truck
fire engine
151
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cement truc
car transpo
animal
transpor
tipper
trailer
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lorry
152
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Drop
side
Fixed side
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Drop side
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Sid
es
are
dro
ppe
d
for
loa
din
g
&u
nlo
adi
ng
Side
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&
tail
boar
d is
hing
ed
for
drop
ping
Side ,t
ail
board
is
fitted
in
corner
irons
with
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the
help of
cotter
pin
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fixed side
158
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In this
type
vehicle
Sides
built in
height
and
rigid
loading
and
unloadi
ng in
Tail
side.
Trans
portat
ion
Vario
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us
agric
ulture
good
s,
indus
trial
good
s&
vario
us
parce
ls
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H
i
g
h
w
h
e
e
l
b
a
s
e
H
i
g
h
l
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o
a
d
c
a
r
r
y
i
n
g
c
a
p
a
c
i
t
y
D
o
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u
b
l
e
a
x
l
e
v
e
h
i
c
l
e
164
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Articulated vehicle
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H
i
g
h
w
h
e
e
l
b
a
s
e
f
o
r
l
e
n
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g
t
h
y
c
o
m
p
o
n
e
n
t
t
o
c
a
r
r
y
D
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u
e
t
o
h
i
g
h
w
h
e
e
l
b
a
s
e
t
u
r
n
i
n
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g
b
e
c
o
m
e
d
i
f
f
i
c
u
l
t
,
s
o
t
r
a
i
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l
e
r
i
m
p
l
e
m
e
n
t
e
d
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Flat platform
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Flat platform
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Sideguards:Anodised aluminium
with galvanised folding sideguard
arms to allow for easy access to
battery and air filters.
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Flat platform
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Underframe:Longitudinals and
floor bearers manufactured from
steel, galvanised or aluminium,
mounted to vehicle chassis with
particular manufacturers
recommendation.
Sideguards:Anodised aluminium
with galvanised folding sideguard
arms to allow for easy access to
battery and air filters.
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Roof:Fibreglass or aluminium
roof skin on fully bonded
galvanised roof sticks with
aluminium standard radius cant
rails.
Interior:9 mm plywood
kickboards to off-side, nearside and bulkhead. Seven
timber or aluminium tie rails
rising at 300 mm centres. Two
interior lamps fitted 600 mm
from front of body and 600 mm
from rear.
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Tanker body
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Tanker body
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Tipper body
184
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186
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