damping ratio

Articles, guides, and products tagged "damping ratio" — a combined view of every catalogue resource on this topic.

User guide

Speed wobble and weave instability on e-scooters: two eigenmodes of two-wheeled vehicle dynamics, eigenvalue analysis of the 4-DOF linearized model (Whipple → Sharp → Meijaard 2007 Proc. R. Soc. A), why 8-10-inch wheels and a high h/L mass-center ratio produce 6-10 Hz wobble at 35-45 km/h, three damping mechanisms (tire side-slip + headset preload + steering damper), diagnostics and rider recovery protocol

Stability at speed is not a question of grip strength but a question of the eigenmode spectrum. A two-wheeled vehicle (bicycle, motorcycle, e-scooter) under forward motion has a linearized 4-DOF model from Whipple (1899) → Sharp (1971) → Meijaard, Papadopoulos, Ruina, Schwab (2007) Proc. R. Soc. A 463:1955-1982 whose eigenvalues yield **two oscillatory modes**: weave (2-4 Hz, lateral inverted-pendulum oscillation of the entire frame with steering in phase) and wobble (6-10 Hz, pure steering-only oscillation with the frame nearly stationary). Depending on forward speed `v`, the real part of one or both eigenmodes passes through zero — a bifurcation where the mode flips from damped to undamped, and any small disturbance (road irregularity, gust crosswind, rider input) excites self-sustained oscillation. Why e-scooter parameters (wheel radius R≈100 mm vs motorcycle 300 mm → 9× lower gyroscopic stabilization; h/L≈0.55 vs 0.35 → higher mass-center normalized to wheelbase → lower critical speed; m_rider/m_vehicle≈4-6 vs ~1 → rider dominates dynamics; headset preload often poorly maintained) shift wobble frequency into the 6-10 Hz range, where rider neuromuscular reflex (80-150 ms latency per Sharp 1971 and Cossalter 'Motorcycle Dynamics' 2nd ed. 2006) cannot stabilize phase and often makes wobble worse through positive-feedback transfer function. Three damping mechanisms — tire side-slip relaxation (Pacejka 'Tire and Vehicle Dynamics' 3rd ed. 2012), headset bearing rotational friction (preload-dependent, ISO 12240 angular contact specs), and external steering damper (hydraulic as in MX/motorcycles, OEM on Dualtron X2 + Wolf King). Diagnostic weekly 3-point play-check (headset move-test, fork twist-test, wheel-bearing rock-test). Rider recovery protocol at speed is counterintuitive and opposite to instinct: **do not grip tight (gripping tighter couples rider-as-amplifier into transfer function and worsens wobble — Sharp 1971); relax hands gently, shift weight rearward onto heels on the rear third of the deck (reduces front-wheel load and thus trail-dependent wobble torque), clamp the stem with knees (couples rider mass to frame, raises effective damping ratio), apply rear brake only (front brake at speed worsens wobble through geometric + gyroscopic coupling per Cossalter 2006 §8.6), and ease speed down to ~20 km/h where the mode naturally decays**. Manufacturer responses: Bird One geometry update 2019 (more conservative head angle after reports of high-speed wobble per IIHS micromobility data); Lime Gen 4 longer wheelbase; hyperscooter class (Dualtron X2, Wolf King GT Pro) ship with hydraulic steering dampers as standard. ENG-first sources: Meijaard et al. 2007 Proc. R. Soc. A 463:1955-1982 DOI 10.1098/rspa.2007.1857; Sharp 1971 JMES 13(5):316-329; Cossalter 'Motorcycle Dynamics' 2nd ed. 2006; Schwab & Meijaard 2013 Vehicle System Dynamics 51(7):1059-1090; TU Delft Bicycle Lab; Pacejka 'Tire and Vehicle Dynamics' 3rd ed. 2012; NHTSA HS-810-844; IIHS Status Report 2022.

13 min read

User guide

E-scooter environmental robustness engineering: cross-cutting environmental-conditioning axis — IEC 60068-2 series climatic+mechanical testing + ISO 16750-3:2023 + ISO 16750-4:2023 road-vehicle ESS + EN 60721-3-x climate-class classification (3K3 / 3K5 / 3K6 / 5M3 / 7K2) + MIL-STD-810H 28 test methods + IPC-9701 accelerated thermal cycling

Engineering deep-dive into e-scooter environmental robustness as the ninth cross-cutting infrastructure axis (environmental-conditioning axis) — parallel to [bolted-joint engineering as joining axis](@/guide/fastener-and-bolted-joint-engineering.md), [thermal management as heat-dissipation axis](@/guide/thermal-management-engineering.md), [EMC/EMI as interference-mitigation axis](@/guide/emc-emi-engineering.md), [cybersecurity as interconnect-trust axis](@/guide/cybersecurity-engineering.md), [NVH as acoustic-vibration-emission axis](@/guide/nvh-engineering.md), [functional safety as safety-integrity axis](@/guide/functional-safety-engineering.md), [battery lifecycle as sustainability axis](@/guide/battery-lifecycle-recycling-engineering.md), and [repairability as repair-axis](@/guide/repair-and-reparability-engineering.md). Covers: 12-row IEC 60068-2 method matrix (-2-1 cold / -2-2 dry heat / -2-6 sinusoidal vibration / -2-11 salt mist / -2-14 thermal cycling / -2-27 mechanical shock / -2-30 damp heat cyclic / -2-31 free-fall drop / -2-38 composite Z/AD / -2-52 salt mist cyclic / -2-64 broad-band random vibration / -2-68 dust & sand / -2-78 damp heat steady state); ISO 16750-3:2023 mechanical loads + ISO 16750-4:2023 climatic loads; EN 60721-3 climate-class table (3K3 sheltered / 3K5 unprotected / 3K6 outdoor + 5M3 mechanical / 7K2 ground-vehicle); MIL-STD-810H 500-series test methods overview; accelerated life testing (HALT/HASS, Arrhenius, Coffin-Manson); IPC-9701 thermal cycling for solder joints; typical OEM e-scooter test profiles; environmental-stress incident timeline 2018-2026; 8-step DIY environmental pre-check; industry shift 2020→2026; 16 numbered sections.

17 min read

User guide

E-scooter NVH engineering: Noise/Vibration/Harshness as the fifth cross-cutting infrastructure axis — UN R51 (motor-vehicle noise) + UN R138 (AVAS quiet road transport) + UN R41 (motorcycle noise) + EU Regulation 540/2014 + FMVSS 141 (49 CFR 571.141 minimum sound for hybrid/electric) + ISO 362-1:2015 vehicle drive-by noise + ISO 2631-1:1997+Amd 1:2010 whole-body vibration + ISO 2631-5:2018 multi-shock + ISO 5349-1/-2:2001 hand-arm vibration (cross-ref) + ISO 11819-1:2023 SPB + ISO 11819-2:2017 CPX road-pavement noise + IEC 60068-2-6:2007 sinusoidal vibration + IEC 60068-2-64:2019 broadband random vibration + MIL-STD-810H:2019 Method 514.8 + ISO 16750-3:2023 automotive mechanical loads + ISO 8608:2016 road surface PSD + ISO 1680:2013 rotating electrical machines airborne noise + ISO 532-1:2017 Zwicker loudness + IEC 61672-1:2013 sound level meters + ISO 13473-1 mean profile depth + SAE J2889 + SAE J3043 + NHTSA NPRM 2009 + EU Reg 540/2014 AVAS mandate (M/N from 2019/2021) + Japan MLIT Article 43-3 + China GB/T 41788-2022

Engineering deep-dive into e-scooter NVH (Noise/Vibration/Harshness) as the fifth cross-cutting infrastructure axis — parallel to [fastener engineering as the joining-axis](@/guide/fastener-and-bolted-joint-engineering.md), [thermal management as the heat-dissipation axis](@/guide/thermal-management-engineering.md), [EMC/EMI as the interference-mitigation axis](@/guide/emc-emi-engineering.md) and [cybersecurity as the interconnect-trust axis](@/guide/cybersecurity-engineering.md). Covers: 10-row standards matrix (UN R51, UN R138, FMVSS 141, EU Reg 540/2014, ISO 362-1, ISO 2631-1/-5, ISO 11819-1/-2, IEC 60068-2-6/-64, MIL-STD-810H, ISO 16750-3, ISO 8608, ISO 1680, ISO 532-1, IEC 61672-1); 7-row noise-source matrix (motor PWM whine 8 kHz fundamental + harmonics + tire-pavement roll + gear mesh + bearing noise ISO 1680 + brake squeal + freewheel pawl + AVAS speaker); 6-row vibration-source matrix (motor unbalance + road surface PSD ISO 8608 A-H + suspension transmissibility + frame fork harmonics + bearing defect BPFO/BPFI + tire harmonic + freewheel impulse); 4-row AVAS regulations matrix (UN R138 EU + FMVSS 141 US + Japan MLIT Article 43-3 + China GB/T 41788-2022); 6-row mitigation matrix (motor laminations + skewing + spread-spectrum PWM + isolator pad + tuned-mass damper + visco-elastic absorber + acoustic enclosure); 4-row durability test matrix (IEC 60068-2-6 sinusoidal + IEC 60068-2-64 broadband random + MIL-STD-810H Method 514.8 + ISO 16750-3 automotive); 8-step DIY NVH check; 6-step DIY remediation; ISO 8608 road class A-H PSD scale; silent EV → AVAS adoption case study; 16 numbered sections.

16 min read

User guide

E-scooter suspension engineering: Hooke's law, hydraulic damping, sag, kinematics, and the EN ISO 8855 / ISO 4210-6 / EN 17128 standards

Engineering deep-dive into the e-scooter suspension subsystem — paralleling the introductory overview “Suspension, wheels and IP protection”: spring physics under Hooke's law (F=-kx, U=½kx², coil k=Gd⁴/8D³n), single-degree-of-freedom dynamics (ω_n=√(k/m), target ride frequency 1.5–3 Hz), hydraulic-damping physics (viscous F=c·v, damping ratio ζ=c/(2√(km)), underdamped/critical/overdamped regimes), full comparison matrix of shock topologies — coil-only (Apollo City Pro, Kaabo Mantis), coil-over-hydraulic (NAMI Burn-E, Wolf King GTR), elastomer (Inokim OXO/OSAP), air-spring, rigid; kinematics — motion ratio (axle travel / shock stroke), leverage curve, linear/rising/falling rate, typical 2:1–3:1; sag setup per Race Tech protocol — static sag 10–15 %, rider sag 25–30 % of wheel travel, L1/L2/L3 averaging method, preload spacer/threaded-collar adjustment; oil viscosity — cSt @ 40 °C vs SAE “wt” nomenclature inconsistency, ISO VG, temperature dependence, 5wt/10wt/15wt cartridge fluid, thermal damping fade; full comparison matrix of safety standards — EN ISO 8855:2011 vehicle dynamics vocabulary (harmonized with SAE J670), ISO 4210-6:2014 bicycle frame+fork fatigue, EN 14781:2005 racing bicycle, EN 17128:2020 PLEV § ‘suspension frame’ definition + impact tests, ECE R75 motorcycle wheel/tyre, FMVSS 122 brake-dive geometry interaction, JIS D 9301 bicycle frame fatigue; integration with geometry (rake/trail/wheelbase) and braking dive; engineering ↔ symptoms diagnostic matrix (wallow / packing / harshness / topping-out / fade); 8-point recap.

18 min read