Motor Equipment News

Troublesho­oting

In last month’s article we took you through automotive brake test engineerin­g from an equipment and automotive perspectiv­e.

- By H.P. LEIJEN Director AECS ltd www.aecs.net info@aecs.net

Test results with the same vehicle

Dollowing are some practical tests we have done with our 2018 Hyundai service van (33,000km) on a newly installed plate brake tester and compared the results with a newly installed roller brake tester.

First we had to establish the actual vehicle weight with no driver in the vehicle, no freight and half a tank of fuel.

LHF 698kg RHF 692kg (axle weight 1390)

LHR 528kg RHR 510kg (axle weight 1038)

These weights were verified with newly calibrated traffic police weight scales. True Total Weight = 2428kg

Practical tests

Following is a series of results of which we can produce photos and video. Realise that the tests have been done with the same vehicle within minutes from each other.

Since the weight was not calibrated correctly on the tester, we used the confirmed static (empty) weight of the vehicle for the actual efficiency calculatio­ns. If you add the driver to the weight used the ‘actual efficiency’ lowers by about 4 percent on an axle weight of +/-1000kg, making the discrepanc­y between actual and displayed efficiency worse.

Test 1: Plate brake results Normal drive on, with gradual braking

The tester shows a total vehicle efficiency of 32 percent, calculated with the actual axle weight this is 25.4 percent, that is in all rule books a WoF fail on this late model vehicle!

Test 2: Plate brake results Normal drive on, harder braking

The tester shows a total vehicle efficiency of 56 percent (a WoF pass), calculated with the actual axle weight the efficiency is 44 percent, that is still a WoF fail.

Test 3: Plate brake results Faster drive on, with gradual braking

The tester shows a total vehicle efficiency of 52 percent (a WoF pass), calculated with the actual axle weight the efficiency is 41 percent, that is still a WoF fail.

Test 4: Plate brake results Faster drive on, harder braking.

The tester shows a total vehicle efficiency of 99 percent. This is not possible (!) and it is rounded down from 101.3 percent, calculated with the actual axle weight the efficiency is 79.7 percent.

Please realise that all brake tests are done with the same vehicle with the same trained operator within minutes of each other without locking up the brakes.

Looking at the reasons for some of these results, the brake plate tester in reality can only provide reasonable consistent results when a car with locked up brakes, is pulled across the brake test plates in a gentle manner (wheel skid).

The rope used for pulling the vehicle across the plates needs to be perfectly horizontal to make sure no weight is added or is removed from any axle. This test still does not test the full circumfere­nce of the brake.

Brake plates are still around because they are incredibly cheap to produce compared to brake rollers so provide a lower price point. The actual brake force sensor is really the only ‘expensive’ part that both types of testers share.

In a plate brake tester there is a lot less steel, there no chains, motors, gear boxes, speed sensors, or rollers. They are also very cheap to install if they are (incorrectl­y) fitted above ground.

Plate brake testers can produce variable results on the very same vehicle back to back by slightly varying how the test is performed as our research above shows.

A plate brake tester should use dynamic weight during a brake test in which you will have to lock the wheels to calculate properly axle efficiency. The difficulti­es are:

• The shift in weight (inertia of the vehicle) when braking increases the brake force on the front axle and decreases the maximum brake force on the rear when lock-up occurs.

• Some of the brake force will be transforme­d into weight reading due to the momentum on the brake plate.

• When driving onto the brake plates when they are above ground (not flush), causes weight oscillatio­ns.

• Lock up on the plates gives weight oscillatio­ns and brake force oscillatio­ns. On brake plates the brake force oscillatio­ns and weight oscillatio­ns need to be matched carefully and rebound must be removed from the results before efficiency can be reasonably calculated.

It is for this reason that back in the nineties the engineer’s setup the software to use static weight in efficiency calculatio­ns. What we have found during our research about 23 years later that on equipment available in NZ static weight is still being used!

That is immediatel­y visible by anyone using a plate brake tester when brake efficienci­es are unrealisti­cally high without even locking up the wheels.

We have seen testers producing results of more than 100 percent brake efficiency without any ‘aerodynami­c downforce’ in the workshops!

Please note the 115 percent decelerati­on rate (efficiency) of that axle in the centre display.

On the plate brake tester to get accurate test results and comparison between the front and rear axle you need to test both axles at the same time, at the same spot of the plates. To do this for example on the front axle first and the rear axle later, produces meaningles­s results as the speed and decelerati­on rate of the vehicle will be different (subjective results).

Roller test results

Below are the brake test results of the exact same vehicle on a recently installed STT45 truck roller brake tester (in truck mode). The weights are with a driver and some tools in the vehicle

Please note on truck brakes the difference should be not greater than 30 percent (<=30) over 4KN.

 ??  ?? Picture of one of the plate brake tests.
Picture of one of the plate brake tests.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Picture from the factory User Manual of a plate brake tester.
Picture from a different type of plate brake tester.
The 99 percent efficiency is actually higher when the values in the screen are used. The software has actually limited the results to 99%, which gives it some sort of correct ‘feeling’.
Picture from the factory User Manual of a plate brake tester. Picture from a different type of plate brake tester. The 99 percent efficiency is actually higher when the values in the screen are used. The software has actually limited the results to 99%, which gives it some sort of correct ‘feeling’.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand