Um, guys? What's a pull coefficient? What is drawbar pull?
I read looked at the report being discussed and was totally lost. Just too many variables and unfamiliar terms to remember, and I couldn't get a picture in my head of how the test was being done.
Lil help?
Sorry, missed this earlier.
The setup is a rover wheel in a dynamometer carriage. The wheel is resting on a bed of simulated lunar soil, and a load of 57 lb is applied to it to make it 'dig in' and get some traction. The wheel is running at a rate that would move the carriage forward at about 2.5 fps if it was allowed to roll freely. The wheel speed is kept constant.
The carriage, however, is moved independently, and it is moved along the test bed at speeds ranging from 0 to about 3 fps. At 0 fps the wheel is spinning without moving, a condition of 100% slip. At 2.5 fps the wheel is rolling along the surface with no slip. In between the amount of slip varies with the speed of the carriage.
As the wheel slips it digs into the soil and is 'trying' to move the carriage forward. It is exerting a pulling force that is measured by force gauges in the carriage. You can also, however, consider this force to be the force the carriage is applying to the wheel to make it slip: in other words the amount of force opposing the forward motion of the wheel that is required to induce that level of slip.
Applying that result to reality, as long as the wheel can overcome that force without slipping the rover can be driven. On a flat, that force is the rolling resistance of the surface. On a hill, the rover's weight acts against it, trying to pull it backwards down the hill. The portion of the weight acting opposite the rover's motion is the force it has to overcome without slipping. The 'pull coefficient' they are describing in the paper is that portion of weight.
Drawbar pull is the force left over when the vehicle has moved itself along a flat surface. An engine exerts a force. Some of that force goes to moving the vehicle itself. The leftover force is what can be used to pull an additional load. That additional load can be a trailer or it can be the extra effort required to move the vehicle up a hill due to the additional effect of the vehicle's own weight trying to make it roll back down the hill.