timbo wrote:Jersey Tom wrote:Hamilton certainly has been known to lock inside fronts. Hard to say from us just watching on TV how much is him versus how much is car setup.
Sure, but he didn't lock fronts as often mid season as he did in last race.
scarbs wrote:I'm told that some engineers don't warm to the idea, wanting to keep the individual wheel rates under seperate control from pitch. Also it seems the dynamics of soft rear and stiff front roll rates don't suit every driver\car\aero package. Lastly the set up doesn't suit all tracks.
DaveW wrote:I think that, if installation stiffnesses are sufficiently high, any combination of bars, corner springs & 3rd spring that yields the same values of Kh & Kr (see my earlier post) will, if all else remains the same, cause a vehicle to respond identically to a disturbance, whatever the source. The problem with a "decoupled" spring layout is often fitting the elements into an envelope (high stiffness bars with sufficient linear stroke are a particular problem, I think). Achieving an adequate installation stiffness can also be difficult.
DaveW wrote:scarbs wrote:I'm told that some engineers don't warm to the idea, wanting to keep the individual wheel rates under seperate control from pitch. Also it seems the dynamics of soft rear and stiff front roll rates don't suit every driver\car\aero package. Lastly the set up doesn't suit all tracks.
Scarbs: I have no issue with your second sentence. However, & with apologies, I do with your first.
I think that, if installation stiffnesses are sufficiently high, any combination of bars, corner springs & 3rd spring that yields the same values of Kh & Kr (see my earlier post) will, if all else remains the same, cause a vehicle to respond identically to a disturbance, whatever the source. The problem with a "decoupled" spring layout is often fitting the elements into an envelope (high stiffness bars with sufficient linear stroke are a particular problem, I think). Achieving an adequate installation stiffness can also be difficult.
timbo wrote:DaveW wrote:I think that, if installation stiffnesses are sufficiently high, any combination of bars, corner springs & 3rd spring that yields the same values of Kh & Kr (see my earlier post) will, if all else remains the same, cause a vehicle to respond identically to a disturbance, whatever the source. The problem with a "decoupled" spring layout is often fitting the elements into an envelope (high stiffness bars with sufficient linear stroke are a particular problem, I think). Achieving an adequate installation stiffness can also be difficult.
Maybe some guys just don't want to commit optimizing their setup for another design?
Jersey Tom wrote: And as for flexures, they do contribute to the ride rate of the car but it's surprisingly low. I have an old, steel flexure ChampCar a-arm around somewhere. When the chassis-side mounts are clamped down, you can get a lot of travel out of the wheel-side point with very little effort.

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