ringo wrote:What I want to know is what does the rig tests reveal?
I will confine myself to how "I" (Multimatic) approach a rig test (although I do have views on other test techniques).
The Multimatic rigs (in Thetford, UK & Toronto, Canada) comprise four hydraulic actuators supporting wheel platforms with (where required) two rolling seal pneumatic actuators to "simulate" a constant aerodynamic down force distribution. A vehicle is rolled onto the wheel platforms on its tyres, hopefully complete, prepared as for the track, & with fluids. When required, the pneumatic actuators are attached to the sprung mass using flexible cables.
The vehicle is excited through its tyres using constant peak velocity, swept sine inputs. Inputs are usually modal (heave, pitch, roll or warp). Recordings are taken during a run and one (or more) runs are processed to identify vehicle parameters that are important dynamically. Essentially, they comprise:
Sprung Mass
Unsprung masses
Sprung mass centre of gravity
Sprung mass pitch inertia
Front & rear axle effective spring stiffnesses
Front & rear axle tyre stiffnesses and equivalent damping coefficients
Front & rear axle "loaded" motion ratios (in some cases)
Front & rear axle damping coefficients
Front & rear axle "installation" stiffnesses
Front & rear axle Inerter masses (if fitted)
Front & rear axle overall roll stiffnesses.
Most of the above parameters are used in a linear vehicle model to identify "rigid body" modal damping ratios. These, together with other measured parameters, are put together as a "cost function" (aka Performance Index, or PI), which is a single number that is intended to have a minimum value when the suspension set-up is "optimal". The linear model, together with the PI can then be used to estimate the "sensitivity" of the PI to selected suspension parameter changes. The sensitivity values are then used to iterate to an "optimal" set up (technically by "steepest descent", rather than "matrix search"). The process is efficient & can usually, for example, reach an optimum damper set-up in 4 or 5 iterations from almost any starting point.
Other things that can be estimated with reasonable precision (or, at least, consistency) are individual damper trajectories, bump rubber characteristics, friction values, relative tyre heat rate, the proportion of input energy dissipated by dampers, tyres, D/F actuators & (by implication) other vehicle elements. A symmetry "rating" is a useful parameter to detect vehicle anomalies (including mis-set dampers).
A test, from my perspective, is very much an exercise in establishing optimal suspension settings, but also an exercise in understanding why and what the limits are. In other words, it is very much an exercise in understanding the vehicle and its dynamic properties, all with no prior knowledge of the vehicle.
An example: a couple of years ago I was asked to help set up a team running in a single make (tin top) series. The first few runs gave unusually high values of symmetry rating (implying that the vehicle was not responding symmetrically). We spent some time trying to identify the problem but failed. Otherwise the day proceeded as normal. The customer reported back that the "rig set-ups" didn't "work", so the vehicle was returned to the rig. I confirmed that he hadn't done anything silly, but the high symmetry rating was still present. We had another search & again failed to find the cause. The following week, the customer reported that he had found a semi-seized CVJ on one of the drive shafts. That was replaced & the vehicle went on to win 11 of the following 14 races "using rig set-ups".
In all, the two Multimatic rigs are used to help around 70 race vehicles a year (and several road vehicles) from around the world (including South America & Australia). I can't claim we always succeed, we don't, but a large proportion are fairly regular customers who are content with what we do & return to check out updates, new dampers, new tyres, etc.