BMMR61 wrote: ↑04 Jun 2024, 07:53
mwillems wrote: ↑03 Jun 2024, 22:12
CjC wrote: ↑03 Jun 2024, 20:58
3 things……
IF Mclaren are running a conventional suspension and doing so well then if they switch to the trick suspension they could do extremely well?
However, because they are doing so well, like you say are they already running it?
Lastly I recall Horner saying towards the end of last season that McLaren run the closest in similarity to Red Bull rear suspension wise?
I'm not suggesting they are running whatever system it is. But the article is written as if we aren't using torsion bars as it starts with listing the teams that are using torsion bars and we aren't included. But I'm pretty confident that we moved to torsion springs this year.
As for whatever the trick is to lower the suspension, I'm sure the team do believe in it and would use it, it is just Stella talking about the pitfalls of not getting it working right that is probably lost in translation and comes across as if it's something we wouldn't do.
Torsion bar suspension has been used at least as far back as the Lotus 72 in 1970. The car also started with anti-dive and anti-squat geometry, later removed as they weren't able to find a good setup. Eventually in 1975 the ageing Lotus 72E after 5 seasons and 2xWDCs reverted to coil spring suspension. Of course weight jackers and ride height systems have been tried and used to some effect (including current MotoGP bikes) but these variations come and go frequently just like various pushrod and pullrod systems. I don't think McLaren will necessarily rush to go this way just because RedBull has gone that direction. As RedBull appear to be getting near the ceiling of performance with these regulations I can imagine McLaren will be looking for their own approaches in general to try to leapfrog the champions. The steady but not slow progress they are making over the last 11 months vindicates a careful approach to developing what shows in the WT and simulator, confirmed at every step by the stopwatch and other measurements of on-track performance.
I'm one on this forum who quietly claims I can actually see the different front end attitude of the car since day 1 at Miami, and I'm a little surprised at others here who believe it's too subtle to see. To me it's turn in on slow corners looks far more positive. From early FP1 I was quietly screaming "Yes, now we have something we can compete with!" With the very significantly improved performance on the tracks we've seen since Miami, it remains to be seen whether the more than respectable high speed corner performance we saw at Silverstone last year will still be there with this car. Nothing can be assumed, they may have altered the circuit specific performance of the 38B away from what we saw on the 60B. I was pretty disappointed with how the 38 without the updates went at Suzuka this year given 2023's incredible pace.
If I was a betting person I'd comfortably bet we are right in the top 5 fight for podium(s) at Canada, with a win on the cards if we make a good start on Friday.
Worthwhile pointing out ? a "coil" spring is only a torsion bar wrapped into a different shape, its action being the same in regard to movement.
Original Morris minor was always a torsion bar front suspension, with rotary damper forming the upper "wishbone" suspension link too.
Citröen 2CV was "FRICS" front rear interconnect suspension, with mass damper at each wheel to control tire "resonance " with i think zero anti-roll
Its really much more knowing about just what the engineer wants the system to do, that visualisation and application of design to counter unwanted movement and promotion of the desirable.
Moto-X in the 1980s used "floating" rear spring shock component, progressive accumulation of load rate etc with more current downhill MTB rear suspension demonstration of variously shifting progression, digression and linearity within the wheel's suspension stroke.
So much is out there, making a wrong step easier than a very good one it would seem, with one of the big challenge here to support accumulation of aero load while still coping with track surface irregularities and keeping the floor assembly where its designed to run.
Overview of McL MP4-4 in regard to front suspension is illuminating from a design point as it shows how they packaged a progressive curve into to the design by alternative method from it's contemporary cars.