| Does your vehicle start in 2.000 m altitude just as reliably as on sea level? How do the emissions change during trips in
high altitudes?
In our accessible decompression chambers we test
components and vehicles regarding their altitude capability
or measure the output of exhaust emissions in line with
standard test cycles.
High altitude chamber
- Usable interior [L x W x H]: 8.5 m x 4.5 m x 4.3 m
- Temperature range
(in roller dynamometer operation): -30 … 50 °C
- Adjustable air humidity: up to 95 % relative humidity
- Atmospheric pressure: max. 630 hPa
(up to 3.800 m altitude above sea level)
- Cooling capacity: max. 180 kW
- CVS exhaust emission measurement with roller dynamometer
(vmax 200 km/h, max. output 210 kW, tractive force
6 kN) and air fan (volumetric flow rate up to 34.000 m3/h,
fan speed up to 130 km/h)
Vacuum chamber
- Usable interior [L x W x H]: 6 m x 3 m x 3 m
- Temperature range: -70 … 80 °C
- Cooling capacity: max. 150 kW
- Atmospheric pressure: max. 50 hPa
(up to 20.000 m above sea level)
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