marcush. wrote:
i have not seen dampers with piggybag reservoirs for some time in modern dampers..
Uh what?
http://www.mulsannescorner.com/AcuraARX-01-4.html
Reservoir location is purely a packaging concern. If you have room for a separating piston with gas volume for a in-line monotube, then you don't need one. If you want an additional valving or you don't have room for inline monotube, you'll need a reservoir, either remote or piggy back. Racing shocks like these, since they are mounted in odd orientation(ie, not up and down, usually), are precharged with a seperate gas volume. So they are not orientation restricted.
Road car shocks can do without that and can be made into twin/tri/quad tube with gas ON liquid(without a separating piston) since they are mounted up and down, you don't have to worry about fluid valving exposed to gas when they are tilted over.
marcush. wrote:
it is because with the low cg heights you can control the roll with springs and dampers .
ARBs are necessary if the rool cannot be restricted by other means.and as stated before the option for the arb is in the H-shaped lever acting on the 3rd spring
at the rear.
Low CG or not, if your roll center is not on the CG you still going to generate a roll moment, and at up to 5G cornering I don't imagine its insignificant. If it is on the CG, all the roll load goes into your suspension links, so they would have to be made stronger(heavier), so I am not sure if that's desirable. To control the roll moment with ride really stiff spring only at their cornering load just seems undesirable(granted, F1 tracks are smooth, so they can get away with a ton of stuff you won't be otherwise). I'd imagine packaging an ARB isn't that bad anyway...
F1 tub obviously is smaller, but they don't have the need for a coil over like that arrangement neither...