Description / Abstract:
This SAE Recommended Practice describes a laboratory test
procedure for measuring the vibration damping performance of a
system consisting of a damping material bonded to a vibrating
cantilevered steel bar. The bar is often called the Oberst bar
(named after Dr. H. Oberst) and the test method is often called the
Oberst Bar Test Method. Materials for damping treatments may
include homogeneous materials, nonhomogeneous materials, or a
combination of homogeneous, nonhomogeneous, and/or inelastic (such
as aluminum foil) materials. These materials are commonly installed
in transportation systems such as ground vehicles, marine products,
and aircraft to reduce vibration at resonance, and thus reduce the
noise radiation from the vibrating surface. The test method
described herein was developed to rank order materials for
application on panels using general automotive steel but also may
be applicable to other situations or conditions.
Damping performance for most materials and systems varies as a
function of both frequency and temperature. Accordingly, this test
procedure includes provisions for measuring damping over a range of
frequencies and temperatures found applicable to many
transportation systems. The measured damping performance will be
expressed in terms of composite loss factor, ηc, within the
frequency range of approximately 100 to 1000 Hz, and over the
useful temperature range for the given application. The term
composite refers to the steel and damping material combination. The
composite loss factor is, therefore, dependent upon the thickness,
damping and modulus of both the steel and damping material
layer.
The test procedure described here is based on the method
described in ASTM E 756. However, this SAE document differs from
the ASTM E 756 method in that the SAE practice specifies the bar
material, three bar sizes, and the mounting conditions of the test
samples. This document provides a means of rank ordering damping
materials according to their composite loss factor values from test
samples that represent typical sheet metal applications.
The material properties of the damping material alone, including
Young's modulus E', and the material loss factor η, may be computed
from the test samples specified in this document if additional
conditions are met. ASTM E 756 defines these additional conditions
as well as the equations to be used to compute the damping material
properties for the single layer (Oberst beam) configuration.