Description / Abstract:
This SAE Recommended Practice establishes uniform test
procedures and performance requirements for the defrosting system
of enclosed cab trucks, buses, and multipurpose vehicles. It is
limited to a test that can be conducted on uniform test equipment
in commercially available laboratory facilities. Current
engineering practice prescribes that for laboratory evaluation of
defroster systems, an ice coating of known thickness be applied to
the windshield and left- and right-hand side windows to provide
more uniform and repeatable test results, even though under actual
conditions such a coating would necessarily be scraped off before
driving. The test condition, therefore, represents a more severe
condition than the actual condition, where the defroster system
must merely be capable of maintaining a cleared viewing area.
Because of the special nature of the operation of most of these
vehicles (where vehicles are generally kept in a garage or warmed
up before driving) and since defrosting under steady-state
over-the-road operations is the main concern, test conditions have
been adopted which assume that the engine is warm before the
vehicle is driven.
There are two options for producing hot coolant in this
recommended practice. Testing using these two approaches on the
same vehicle will not necessarily provide identical results. Many
vehicle models are offered with optional engines, and each engine
has varying coolant temperatures and flow rates. If the test is
being conducted to compare the performance of one defroster design
to another defroster design, then the external coolant source
approach (Test A) will yield the most comparable results. If the
test is being conducted to validate the defroster installation on a
specific vehicle model with a specific engine, then using the
engine to heat the coolant (Test B) will be more appropriate.
This document will be reviewed and revised as technological
progress in vehicle defroster test procedure requires.