Abstract
The genesis of clutch noise, encompassing squeaks, chatter, shudders, or judders, predominantly arises from friction-induced vibrations. As time progresses, the degradation of the clutch friction lining manifests due to diverse factors, such as the smearing of surface irregularities, elevated transmission fluid temperatures, fluctuating axial pressure, or aggressive shifting. Consequently, the slope of the friction curves tends to assume a negative gradient, giving rise to adverse damping effects like self-excited oscillations or stick-slip oscillations within the clutch pack. A lesser-discussed phenomenon, known as squawking, occurs through analogous mechanisms discussed in this paper. This paper delves into investigating the occurrence of squawking noise observed in automatic transmission multi-disc clutches during low-speed up-shifts. The study discerns friction-induced vibrations as the primary contributor to squawk during the inertia phase of the clutch engagement cycle, a facet previously unidentified. During this phase, high-frequency weakly damped oscillating modes become self-excited due to the negative slope of the coefficient of friction versus slip speed curve. The coefficient of friction functions as negative damping during the inertia phase, where the energy dissipation from damping is insufficient to completely halt the oscillations, allowing them to persist approximately at the natural frequency until clutch lock-up. Experimental data validate the proposed model and hypothesis, with results closely aligning with numerical simulations. The paper concludes by offering practical suggestions to prevent and mitigate squawk in automatic transmission wet clutches, with the aim of enhancing overall performance and reducing undesirable noise.