Sound quality jury analysis versus sound pressure measurement in snowmobiles
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
5-19-2009
Department
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Abstract
Restrictions on noise and gaseous emissions of snowmobiles have been a topic of much attention for the past decade. Concerns with snowmobiles in our national parks and with private land owners have resulted in new park legislations as well as legal disputes regarding recreational vehicle rights-of-way. The most widely used standard for snowmobile testing is SAE J192 Exterior Sound Level for Snowmobiles, SAE Recommended Practice. This is a wide-open throttle test with sound level meters 50 feet on either side of the snowmobile. The sound pressure cannot exceed a certain level for the snowmobile to pass. Perceived noise also plays an important role in the objections to snowmobiles. This paper considers the role of Sound Quality methods, specifically Jury Analysis, in understanding the difference between objective noise analysis and subjective noise preferences; also considering the underlying snowmobile attributes that control snowmobile noise. Both objective and subjective data taken at the SAE Clean Snowmobile Challenges will be used as the basis of the analysis. Conclusions show that there are measurable quantities related to annoyance that correlate with subjective noise preference.
Publication Title
SAE Technical Papers
Recommended Citation
Meldrum, J.,
&
Knittel, J.
(2009).
Sound quality jury analysis versus sound pressure measurement in snowmobiles.
SAE Technical Papers.
http://doi.org/10.4271/2009-01-2231
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/2939
Publisher's Statement
Copyright © 2009 SAE International. Publisher’s version of record: https://doi.org/10.4271/2009-01-2231