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Technical Paper

Subjective and Objective Seat Feature Acoustic and Vibration Response

2021-08-31
2021-01-1075
Compressors, fans, and valves in seats used for occupant height adjust, lumbar, heating, and cooling can be objectionable if felt or heard. An approach to measure subjectively and objectively both vibration and noise experienced by a seated occupant will be described along with results, ranking, statistical significance, correlation, and suggestions for noise control. The objective portion included acoustic measurements through a binaural headset worn by each occupant and vibration measurements were recorded using a seat pad accelerometer disc at the buttocks and a source accelerometer. A subjective questionnaire with Likert, Borg, Magnitude Estimation, Semantical Differences, and Ranking based questions was obtained from 9 subjects.
Technical Paper

Comparison of Measurement Methods for Evaluating Displacement of Commercial Vehicle Seats

2019-06-05
2019-01-1481
Measuring the displacements in vehicle seat suspensions and the displacements the seat has to absorb may assist vehicle seat designers in better designing seats to absorb vibrations. Low frequency seat displacement is important in seat design to identify end-stop events and higher frequency shorter displacements are also important since seat components can be optimized to absorb these smaller displacements. Displacements can be directly measured with special instruments, but it would be less complicated if simple, compact accelerometers could be used to measure the seat displacements. This paper compares accelerometer-derived displacement measurements to known displacements derived from sinusoidal physics and field measured random displacements measured with potentiometers. Using known, controlled sinusoidal displacements, three lab-based experiments were conducted to determine how well accelerometers, using double integration, could measure displacements.
Technical Paper

Truck and Construction Seat BSR Identification and Characterization

2017-06-05
2017-01-1858
Truck and construction seats offer a number of different challenges compared to automotive seats in the identification and characterization of Buzz, Squeak, and Rattle (BSR) noises. These seats typically have a separate air or mechanical suspension and usually a larger number and variety of mechanical adjustments and isolators. Associated vibration excitation tend to have lower frequencies with larger amplitudes. In order to test these seats for both BSR and vibration isolation a low-noise shaker with the ability to test to a minimum frequency of 1 Hz was employed. Slowly swept sine excitation was used to visualize the seat mode shapes and identify nonlinearities at low frequencies. A sample set of seat BSR sounds are described in terms of time and frequency characteristics, then analyzed using sound quality metrics.
Journal Article

A Design of Experiments Analysis to Determine the Importance of Relevant Factors on the STL of an Acoustic Part

2013-05-13
2013-01-2009
This paper discusses a design of experiments (DOE) analysis that was performed to understand relevant factors that influence the acoustic performance of a sound package part used in the commercial vehicle industry for the floor mat application. The acoustic performance of the sound package part which is a double wall system and constructed of a barrier and cellular decoupler material is expressed in terms of sound transmission loss (STL). An experiment was designed using the Taguchi DOE technique with three factors and three levels to acquire the STL data and is discussed in the paper. The results of the DOE analysis and the confidence in the model are discussed as well as the benefits of predicting expected STL performances are mentioned in the paper.
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