This section describes coastdown procedures that are unique to vehicles above 14,000 pounds GVWR. These procedures are valid for calculating road-load coefficients for chassis and post-transmission powerpack testing. These procedures are also valid for calculating drag area (CdA) to demonstrate compliance with Phase 1 greenhouse gas emission standards under 40 CFR part 1037.
Where:
i = an interval counter, starting with i = 1 for the first interval. The designation (i-1) corresponds to the end of the previous interval or, for the first interval, to the start of the test run.
Me = the vehicle's effective mass, expressed to at least the nearest 0.1 kg.
v = vehicle speed at the beginning and end of the measurement interval.
[DELTA]t = elapsed time over the measurement interval, in seconds.
Where:
M = the measured vehicle mass, expressed to at least the nearest 0.1 kg.
ag = acceleration of Earth's gravity, as described in 40 CFR 1065.630 .
[DELTA]h = change in elevation over the measurement interval, in m. Assume [DELTA]h = 0 if you are not correcting for grade.
[DELTA]s = distance the vehicle travels down the road during the measurement interval, in m.
Am = the calculated value of the y-intercept based on the curve-fit.
Where:
[RHO] = air density at reference conditions = 1.17 kg/m3.
T = mean ambient absolute temperature during testing, in K.
P = mean ambient pressuring during the test, in kPa.
A = Am
B = 0
C = Dadj
40 C.F.R. §1066.310