Front lower control arm of Subaru Impreza and Brz

Breaking news, useful data or technical highlights or vehicles that are not meant to race. You can post commercial vehicle news or developments here.
Please post topics on racing variants in "other racing categories".
ysyy88
ysyy88
0
Joined: 14 Feb 2011, 05:02

Front lower control arm of Subaru Impreza and Brz

Post

Image

why they reverse the triangle arm?
because no drive force on the front wheel of brz?

marcush.
marcush.
159
Joined: 09 Mar 2004, 16:55

Re: the front lower control arm of subaru impreza and brz

Post

reverse in what ? putting one leg paralell to the axle line and and the other forward is not reversing in my view .
It may be package constraints , production demands and of course cost that lead to solutions like this.

I think it is something owed to FWD layouts ,the Mcpherson strut seems very front wheel drive as well...so maybe they borrowed the whole front suspension from another car or produce the car on a FWD assembly line..

ysyy88
ysyy88
0
Joined: 14 Feb 2011, 05:02

Re: the front lower control arm of subaru impreza and brz

Post

marcush. wrote:reverse in what ? putting one leg paralell to the axle line and and the other forward is not reversing in my view .
It may be package constraints , production demands and of course cost that lead to solutions like this.

I think it is something owed to FWD layouts ,the Mcpherson strut seems very front wheel drive as well...so maybe they borrowed the whole front suspension from another car or produce the car on a FWD assembly line..
the hypotenuse at the front of arm or back of the arm

ysyy88
ysyy88
0
Joined: 14 Feb 2011, 05:02

Re: the front lower control arm of subaru impreza and brz

Post

marcush. wrote:reverse in what ? putting one leg paralell to the axle line and and the other forward is not reversing in my view .
It may be package constraints , production demands and of course cost that lead to solutions like this.

I think it is something owed to FWD layouts ,the Mcpherson strut seems very front wheel drive as well...so maybe they borrowed the whole front suspension from another car or produce the car on a FWD assembly line..
these bmws

E90 325xi and 325i

Image

marcush.
marcush.
159
Joined: 09 Mar 2004, 16:55

Re: the front lower control arm of subaru impreza and brz

Post

even the two pics you posted show one similar to the subaru ,no? The E90 325i angles the forward leg of the wishbone far to the front of the car and has the rear leg paralell to the axle line ...

Greg Locock
Greg Locock
233
Joined: 30 Jun 2012, 00:48

Re: Front lower control arm of Subaru Impreza and Brz

Post

For some reason i can't see any of your pictures.

In a conventional modern MacP it is always advantageous to have one link directly in line with the wheel centre, as this provides your lateral compliance and is part of the steering parallelogram.

The choice is then where to locate the other inboard bush.

It can go forward or behind the wheel centre.

Often it is driven by the rack location - there ar e compliance advantages in having the rack and the bush on the same side.

Rack location is usually fixed by the engine packaging.

However if we ignore that - Forward is worse for crash, and tends to be worse for impact harshness.

However I would guess in 90% of cases it is driven by packaging and nothing else.

User avatar
Tim.Wright
330
Joined: 13 Feb 2009, 06:29

Re: Front lower control arm of Subaru Impreza and Brz

Post

I'd agree about the packaging being the main constraint.

What's the effect of the rack position on impact harshness? Can't get my head around that one.
Not the engineer at Force India

Greg Locock
Greg Locock
233
Joined: 30 Jun 2012, 00:48

Re: Front lower control arm of Subaru Impreza and Brz

Post

Body is stiffer further back, therefore the impedance mismatch between the bush and body is greater.

olefud
olefud
79
Joined: 13 Mar 2011, 00:10
Location: Boulder, Colorado USA

Re: Front lower control arm of Subaru Impreza and Brz

Post

I can’t get your illustrations either. But as I picture it, the forward arm would load in tension under braking. Generally, it’s better to load in compression, but expect either is sufficiently strong. But this may be what looks odd.
The design may well have come from front-wheel drive. The drive loading on the A-arm isn’t as high with FWD but the steering feedback from lash is more noticeable.