Belatti wrote:Jersey Tom wrote:Looking at it again.. that your dampers are working almost entirely at less than 2 in/s seems really odd.
Sorry, when I said that I had calibration issues I was referring to the track vs. post rig tests. What I question now its those graphs practical usefulness.
The damper speed graphs are not wrong, though. I re-plotted them for you to see that higher speeds are reached but they still dont contributed much to the histogram:
After continuing judging them, you should know more about the cars motion ratio, and maybe masses and rigidity, because remember they are damper and not wheel movement.
speedsense wrote:
All the graphs are "full" lap graphs. This a problem when looking for shock trends and aero trends.
The FFT graph is for a braking + curve + beginning of acceleration (arround 8 seconds) for a single wheel.
The damper speed histogram is for a whole lap.
The DF level graph is only for a straight, I have re-plotted to graph erasing the first part as DaveW suggested and calculated the 2 front damper average displacement:
speedsense wrote:
With Aero downforce, the same technique can be applied, with perticular speeds chosen for gates. It is best to analyze, with the car straight (no lateral, or braking long g) and keep the range within a few KM's for each target speed.
Without a pitot tube however, you could be spitting into the wind... (pun intended)
Right.
If you would, re-plot these (raw shock signal) with the fronts on top of each other, same for the rear, and include a lat g signal/steering overplot, throttle/ and either long G/brake pressure, along with it. If possible zoom to one right hand corner including (end of braking event, entry, apex, throttle on exit) then a similar one in a left hand corner.
In a more exact plotting, would be breaking each "element" up into three zooms, entry, apex, throttle on exit. Just to simply things a bit. This will help define, if it's a bleed problem, valving or in some cases pressure problems (cavitation? Hydraulic overpressure,some cases due to heat) with the rear shocks.
In comparisons of raw data vs a shock dyno or even a seven poster, the missing element is always the dyno "known" load input measurements, so assumptions have to be made in the reactions of the shocks. Though, when analyzing shock data, comparisons such as these can still extract vital info of how the shock transitions from low speed to high speed.
The "timing" of how quickly the shocks blow through the low speed (<48mm per sec) and enter high speed, as the car takes to a "static" set vs the input just before that supplied the velocity (steering, throttle etc.) It is necessary that you known the input that is causing the shock reaction and hence the need for driver info to be involved and slicing out the higher velocities of the bumps,curbs etc.
In my opinion, the rear shocks are spending so little time in low speed, and have frequent overshooting into high speed velocities, compared to the front low and high speeds. The rears appear to be under damped, especially in the low speed and even under damped, allowing almost twice the high speed velocities (can't tell as the graph is "clipped" at the high frequencies, though the number is almost twice) of the front (even considering the mass weight of the rear of the car)
IMHO
"Driving a car as fast as possible (in a race) is all about maintaining the highest possible acceleration level in the appropriate direction." Peter Wright,Techical Director, Team Lotus