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Vehicle Drive Force and Speed Calculations

The document discusses formulas for calculating various forces involved in driving a vehicle, including road resistance, grade resistance, air resistance, acceleration force, torque, horsepower, momentum, and axle deflection. It provides formulas to calculate travel speed, acceleration, axle torque, drawbar pull, horsepower required, momentum, grade resistance, air resistance, and axle deflection angle. The goal is to select an engine that provides enough power to overcome all road and mechanical losses.

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Tejaswi Verma
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
468 views1 page

Vehicle Drive Force and Speed Calculations

The document discusses formulas for calculating various forces involved in driving a vehicle, including road resistance, grade resistance, air resistance, acceleration force, torque, horsepower, momentum, and axle deflection. It provides formulas to calculate travel speed, acceleration, axle torque, drawbar pull, horsepower required, momentum, grade resistance, air resistance, and axle deflection angle. The goal is to select an engine that provides enough power to overcome all road and mechanical losses.

Uploaded by

Tejaswi Verma
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Vehicle Drive Calculations

The force to drive a vehicle is composed of the sum of (1) road resistance, (2) force
necessary to climb a grade, (3) force needed to accelerate to final velocity in the allowable
time, (4) force to overcome air resistance, on fast moving vehicles. Each of these forces can
be calculated or estimated from the formulas on this page, then added together. In selecting
an engine, allow enough extra power to make up for losses in the mechanical transmission
system including gear boxes, clutches, differentials, chain or belt drives.
Travel Speed in MPH (miles per hour)
is found by multiplying wheel RPM wheel
circumference.

Acceleration of a vehicle is expressed


in this formula involving weight, accelerating
force, and time.

MPH = RPM d 336, or


RPM = 336 MPH d
d is wheel diameter in inches.

F = (V W) (g T)
F is accelerating force in pounds.
V is final velocity in feet per second.
W is vehicle weight in pounds.
g is gravity acceleration = 32.16
T is time in seconds that force acts.

Axle Torque for driving the vehicle is


found by multiplying drawbar pull (or push)
times wheel radius.
T = F r or, F = T r
T is axle torque in inch pounds.
F is drawbar pull in pounds.
r is wheel radius in inches.
Drawbar Pull to keep the vehicle in
steady motion on level ground depends
on the road surface. The following figures
are pounds of drawbar pull per 1000 lbs. of
vehicle weight.
Concrete. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 to 20 lbs.
Asphalt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 to 22 lbs.
Macadam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 to 37 lbs.
Cobbles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 to 85 lbs.
Snow. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 to 37 lbs.
Dirt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 to 37 lbs.
Mud. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 to 150 lbs.
Sand . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 to 300 lbs.
Horsepower required
wheels is torque times RPM:

on

vehicle

HP = T RPM 63024
T is wheel torque in inch pounds.
NOTE: Additional HP is required at the
engine to overcome transmission system
losses.
Conversion Formula between torque,
HP, and speed.
T = HP 63024 RPM
Torque values are in inch pounds.
Momentum of a vehicle is equivalent
to that constant force which would bring
it to rest in one second by resisting its
movement.
Momentum = Weight V g
Weight is in pounds.
V is velocity in feet per second.
g is gravity acceleration = 32.16

Note: The gravity acceleration symbol, g,


converts weight into mass.
Grade, in mobile work, is usually
expressed in percentage rather than in
degrees. For example, a 10% grade has a
rise of 10 feet in a distance of 100 feet, etc.
Grade Resistance is the drawbar pull
needed to keep the vehicle in constant
motion up a grade. This is in addition to the
drawbar pull to overcome road resistance
as expressed by another formula.
F = GR W
F is drawbar pull in pounds.
GR is grade resistance in percent
(20% is written as 0.20, etc.)
W is gross vehicle weight in pounds.
Air Resistance will be important only
on fast moving vehicles (over 20 to 30
MPH).
F = FA 0.0025 MPH 2
F is additional drawbar pull needed to
overcome air resistance.
FA is frontal area of vehicle in square feet.
MPH is vehicle speed, miles per hour.
Axles and drive shafts must have
a diameter large enough to transmit the
torque without excessive deflection. The
angle of deflection for a solid round axle
may be calculated from this formula:
A = 583.6 T L (D4 E)
A is angle of deflection in degrees.
T is applied torque in inch pounds.
L is shaft length in inches.
E is modulus of elasticity of material.
(12,000,000 for steel)
D is shaft diameter in inches.
Some authorities say that a steel shaft
should be limited to an angular deflection
of 0.08 degrees per foot of length to avoid
failure.

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