DEVELOPING A TAIPEI MOTORCYCLE DRIVING CYCLE FOR EMISSIONS AND FUEL ECONOMY.

Author(s)
Tzeng-G, H. & Chen-J, J.
Year
Abstract

The purposes of this study are to develop a representative driving cycle for motorcycles in metropolitan Taipei and to ascertain the emissions and fuel economy of the cycle. The authors collected extensive driving cycle data and proposed a methodology to develop a Taipei motorcycle driving cycle (TMDC). The characteristics of TMDC are high average acceleration and deceleration, high acceleration-deceleration changes and low average travel speed. Forty-five motorcycles were tested in a laboratory by using the ECE-40 and TMDC test procedure. The emissions of motorcycles tested by TMDC are higher than ECE, whether they are two-stroke or four-stroke engines. Furthermore, the CO and HC emissions of two-stroke engine motorcycles are lower than four-stroke engine motorcycles, whether they are tested by TMDC or ECE. The fuel economy of two-stroke engine motorcycles by TMDC is lower than ECE, but the fuel economy of four-stroke engine motorcycles tested by TMDC is higher than ECE. A linear regression of TMDC in terms of ECE emissions shows them to be highly correlated, as is fuel economy. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I 894758 /15 /91 / ITRD 894758
Source

Transportation Research Part D. 1998 /01. 3d(1) Pp19-27

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.