Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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PlatinumZealot
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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Zynerji wrote:
Tue Feb 25, 2020 2:07 am
Does loading the outboard side of the wing of the inside tyre help load the inside tyre, or does it transfer to both front wheels equally?

I'd assume it would transfer load to the inside pylon, and "tilt" the nose in that direction, but im not sure. Part of my brain says it would, and possibly lift the outside pylon like a lever, but with zero real world experience, I'm simply not sure, and would like some professional input.
Because the moment has to be balanced it should add load to the inside wheel.

Maybe this is what is being done to even out the tyre loads.

Normally that side of the wing would be higher off the ground because of body roll and thus generate less downforce.
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Zynerji
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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Thanks for your answer. I would upvote if it worked on Chrome mobile...

Greg Locock
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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I would expect that with the amount of pontificating going on here some enthusiast would have hacked together CAD or whatever and actually plotted some curves out. K&C=kinematics and compliance. As I said I'm not going to as that's my job at work.

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henry
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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Greg Locock wrote:
Sun Mar 01, 2020 8:30 am
I would expect that with the amount of pontificating going on here some enthusiast would have hacked together CAD or whatever and actually plotted some curves out. K&C=kinematics and compliance. As I said I'm not going to as that's my job at work.

No doubt someone could scan photographs to get the geometric constraints and hence kinematic behaviour but, bus driver or no, from whence would they get the compliance values of the flexible elements and, in particular, the change in aero downforce with ground clearance?
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Greg Locock
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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aero-Katz or Wright

The compliances won't change the shapes all that much.Spring rate matters.

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henry
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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spring rates would come from? And they’re not compliance?
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Greg Locock
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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Usually by compliances we'd mean bushings and the structural stiffness. Spring rates are a tunable parameter.

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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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Tim.Wright wrote:
Thu Feb 20, 2020 10:02 pm
I'm suspecting the primary use of the DAS is not for tyre scrub but to change the ride height down the straights for lower drag.
No way they could be doing that and avoid the "movable aero" hammer.

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henry
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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Greg Locock wrote:
Mon Mar 02, 2020 4:43 am
Usually by compliances we'd mean bushings and the structural stiffness. Spring rates are a tunable parameter.
I see. Since the F1 suspension has no bushings, or at least mightily stiff ones, and the stiffness of the other components are also pretty much unknowable, what you meant was a Kinematic study.

Edit: having looked at what K&C rigs do they seem to measure parameters that are invoked by mechanism movement due to spring stiffnesses. So while springs are tuneable the results are measured for one set of tuned springs.

I guess the difference with F1 is that the movements affect the loads, and hence movements themselves, due to the change in aero loads created. After all that’s why they have run with the POU setup.
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PlatinumZealot
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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Greg Locock wrote:
Sun Mar 01, 2020 8:30 am
I would expect that with the amount of pontificating going on here some enthusiast would have hacked together CAD or whatever and actually plotted some curves out. K&C=kinematics and compliance. As I said I'm not going to as that's my job at work.
That's exactly why you should!

I did a kinematic sketch in CAD after i did the ackerman post. That's why i stood corrected when i wrongfully stated it was anti-ackerman.
I'm very rusty though so didnt bother to put in all the details in the sketch.
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godlameroso
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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henry wrote:
Mon Mar 02, 2020 9:45 am
Greg Locock wrote:
Mon Mar 02, 2020 4:43 am
Usually by compliances we'd mean bushings and the structural stiffness. Spring rates are a tunable parameter.
I see. Since the F1 suspension has no bushings, or at least mightily stiff ones, and the stiffness of the other components are also pretty much unknowable, what you meant was a Kinematic study.

Edit: having looked at what K&C rigs do they seem to measure parameters that are invoked by mechanism movement due to spring stiffnesses. So while springs are tuneable the results are measured for one set of tuned springs.

I guess the difference with F1 is that the movements affect the loads, and hence movements themselves, due to the change in aero loads created. After all that’s why they have run with the POU setup.
Rose joints have very little compliance beyond their intended articulation. Road cars use rubber bushings, especially the front compliance bushing that controls caster because of NVH, things that don't matter in a race car. A lot of performance cars coming out today with double wishbone suspensions still use steel reinforced rubber bushings for the lower arms, and rose joints in the upper arms. They're finally catching up to what people in the S2k scene have been doing for over 5 years :)
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PhillipM
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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Road cars have used rotoball versions of spherical bearings with rubber/polymer outer races for decades, way longer than 5 years.
They only get used where absolutely required though because they're worse than a normal bonded bush for friction and NVH

Greg Locock
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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15 or 20 years ago one of my coworkers designed a rubber bushing that was as stiff as a typical rose joint (at least as installed, the installation stiffness of most cars is way less than that of a rose joint), and had very little coning or torsional stiffness, originally used to reduce the side load in the shocks. A fine and useful bush which is used in several of 'my' suspension designs.

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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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PlatinumZealot wrote:
Sat Feb 15, 2020 11:09 am
I think this is the W10
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Stu
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Re: Push rod on upright suspension - an examination

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Greg Locock wrote:
Sun Feb 16, 2020 8:31 am
So in plan view is the pushrod to spindle joint in front of, or behind, the kingpin axis?
The attachment ‘link’ on the Mercedes one is so long/offset that it could conceivably be both, depending on whereabouts within the steering range it is!!
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