netoperek wrote:But i suppose, in that case, flow's character could change depending on viscosity, ie, laminar at high voltage applied and turbulent with low or none voltage, wouldn't it?
I'm unfamiliar with the internal details of an MR damper, but I suspect you are correct about flow conditions. To be pedantic, I think the "variable" element of viscosity is a function of drive current, rather than voltage, & the switching speed (the bandwidth) of the damper will depend upon the drive amplifier "head room" (i.e. its ability to "sink" back emf, just like any audio amplifier).
The suspension of any vehicle is required to control disturbance energy dissipation "efficiently", as you suggested, whilst also controlling vehicle transient response and, for a race application, giving a driver the confidence to drive close to the performance limits of the vehicle. These are mainly concerned with contact patch load control in the presence of both road & driver inputs. The suspension of a road vehicle has the additional requirement of achieving the first two requirements "comfortably" (i.e. minimizing load variations transmitted to the passenger "cell").
The three (or four) requirements "pull" in different directions & so, as a result, an acceptable suspension set-up will be a compromise, dependent upon the intended market, development driver preferences, and the consistency of the hardware. It will also depend (often) upon decisions that have been cast in concrete by the time a development driver starts to weave his magic.
Adaptive dampers for road vehicles are seductive because they offer the possibility of relaxing the compromises imposed by "fixed" dampers. Usually, that means changing damping in response to driver inputs, and adjusting damping as a function of instantaneous damper position & velocity. Without question, however, the performance of the system will be acceptable only if the hardware performs consistently. I think that any novel damping device is likely to have both general and specific problems to be solved in order to achieve a performance that is both reliable, consistent, & has acceptable failure modes. Overall weight would be another potential issue in a racing application...
p.s. I have slightly more than an abstract interest in MR dampers, because they are fitted to my current road vehicle.