This was common on many cars.
Anyone remember when the snobby new car press would rip on the Corvette for having a leaf spring? Ignorance is bliss.
Many great cars were frowned upon by the motoring journos for having torsion beam axle and not having "fully" "independent" suspensionHoffman900 wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 16:54This was common on many cars.
Anyone remember when the snobby new car press would rip on the Corvette for having a leaf spring? Ignorance is bliss.
De-dion, axle, is theoretically similar to multi link trapezoid arm suspension as used by German automaker on rear axle of their 80's to mid 2000's AWD road cars?
They are afraid that in spite of a budget cap, certain teams could develop locked in advantages that make a season uncompetitive.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 21:22I really wish they would open up the suspension rules. What a wasted opportunity.
Almost all the rules should be stopped. F1 was called that because there was only one rule. It would take fuel, no electronics, no radio communications, a steering wheel with no buttons, a gearbox, a brake pedal...wow.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 21:22I really wish they would open up the suspension rules. What a wasted opportunity.
Sad really, because active suspension would have been cheap to develop, and then rest pretty much done with software. They are probably already spending more time and money on a mechanical setup than an active one. Many people say about failure etc, but the same applies to mechanical suspension setups.AR3-GP wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 22:26They are afraid that in spite of a budget cap, certain teams could develop locked in advantages that make a season uncompetitive.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 21:22I really wish they would open up the suspension rules. What a wasted opportunity.
And a system could be standardised just as the engine ECU is a standard item. Standard system with standard components and just let the teams finesse the "maps" their cars run.SiLo wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:23Sad really, because active suspension would have been cheap to develop, and then rest pretty much done with software. They are probably already spending more time and money on a mechanical setup than an active one. Many people say about failure etc, but the same applies to mechanical suspension setups.AR3-GP wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 22:26They are afraid that in spite of a budget cap, certain teams could develop locked in advantages that make a season uncompetitive.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑15 Mar 2022, 21:22I really wish they would open up the suspension rules. What a wasted opportunity.
Agree, this would have made following another car even more easierJust_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:25And a system could be standardised just as the engine ECU is a standard item. Standard system with standard components and just let the teams finesse the "maps" their cars run.SiLo wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:23Sad really, because active suspension would have been cheap to develop, and then rest pretty much done with software. They are probably already spending more time and money on a mechanical setup than an active one. Many people say about failure etc, but the same applies to mechanical suspension setups.
Pretty much how I would have done it. Development costs minimal, just whatever mapping you want to run for your car and on each track. It made so much sense, but the FIA chose another route because... well just because.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:25And a system could be standardised just as the engine ECU is a standard item. Standard system with standard components and just let the teams finesse the "maps" their cars run.SiLo wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:23Sad really, because active suspension would have been cheap to develop, and then rest pretty much done with software. They are probably already spending more time and money on a mechanical setup than an active one. Many people say about failure etc, but the same applies to mechanical suspension setups.
Cars would probably get heavier.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:25And a system could be standardised just as the engine ECU is a standard item. Standard system with standard components and just let the teams finesse the "maps" their cars run.SiLo wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:23Sad really, because active suspension would have been cheap to develop, and then rest pretty much done with software. They are probably already spending more time and money on a mechanical setup than an active one. Many people say about failure etc, but the same applies to mechanical suspension setups.
the biggest ever driver aid ....shamyakovic wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:46Agree, this would have made following another car even more easierJust_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:25And a system could be standardised just as the engine ECU is a standard item. Standard system with standard components and just let the teams finesse the "maps" their cars run.SiLo wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:23Sad really, because active suspension would have been cheap to develop, and then rest pretty much done with software. They are probably already spending more time and money on a mechanical setup than an active one. Many people say about failure etc, but the same applies to mechanical suspension setups.
Maybe, hard to tell really. But reducing weight shouldn't be coming from screwing around with suspension regs, it should come from elsewhere.AR3-GP wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 16:49Cars would probably get heavier.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:25And a system could be standardised just as the engine ECU is a standard item. Standard system with standard components and just let the teams finesse the "maps" their cars run.SiLo wrote: ↑16 Mar 2022, 11:23
Sad really, because active suspension would have been cheap to develop, and then rest pretty much done with software. They are probably already spending more time and money on a mechanical setup than an active one. Many people say about failure etc, but the same applies to mechanical suspension setups.