Paper
7 March 2006 Holographic interferometry and its application in brake vibration and noise analysis
Mitchell M. Marchi, Fang Chen, Pat Harwood, R. Linder, Gordon M. Brown
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Brake roughness and brake squeal are important issues/concems of customer satisfaction in the automotive industry. Brake roughness is a low frequency vibration while brake squeal is a high frequency noise. Some fundamental root causes of brake roughness are rotor runout, rotor surface flat spots, etc., which cause brake torque variation that in turn produces unwanted low frequency vibration. Brake squeal is a dynamic instability and nonlinear phenomenon that occurs in a frequency range of lKHz to 15KHz, which is in the range of sensitivity for the human ear. Squeal is usually caused by excitation of brake components brought on by slip-stick of the brake caliper pad material and rotor surface during brake actuation. This paper will provide an overview of examples that illustrate the application of holographic interferometry methodology to identify the root causes of brake concerns and verify engineering solutions.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mitchell M. Marchi, Fang Chen, Pat Harwood, R. Linder, and Gordon M. Brown "Holographic interferometry and its application in brake vibration and noise analysis", Proc. SPIE 4101, Laser Interferometry X: Techniques and Analysis, (7 March 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.498401
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KEYWORDS
Holographic interferometry

Holograms

Holography

Laser imaging

Aluminum

Fringe analysis

Assembly equipment

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