Dave,
Thank you for the clarification...As an aside, having read the introductory pages of the Dixon book it's not difficult to come to the conclusion that the propensity for dampers to be rebound biased is steeped in tradition....
Wil
Rubber is incompressible. What it does is it deforms but the volume stays constant. Foam rubber is compressible - it is the air in the bubbles that compresses.Belatti wrote:Dave, thats exactly what I suspect that is happening with those dampers and, of course, they are twin tube with nothing physical separating the fluid & the air reservoir.
As using pressure is forbiden by the rules, the solution Im gonna try here is to use some kind of rubber, maybe like this one:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethylene-vinyl_acetate
to fill the air volume that you need to have but letting the oil compress it at the same time...
Maybe next week I can plot the results...
Actually Ciro, my dearest friend in this mean world of unwarranted hostility, the problem occurs when those bubbles implode?Ciro Pabón wrote: ..., when the bubbles created by cavitation explode, the effects on the concrete surfaces are minimized.
...
The largest difference I can see between the two data sets is a load offset....Belatti wrote:In blue you can see a damper cycled from 0,1Hz to 6Hz in steps of 0,1Hz.
In red you can see the same, with the difference that it is an average value of 10 cycles of every step in frequency (0,1 to 6).
Indeed! The thing is, was that an error of load cell calibration or its the transients from the 1st cycle that in the blue case is computed and in the red one is averaged over the other 9 cycles?DaveW wrote: The largest difference I can see between the two data sets is a load offset....
Check my post from november 5th... 200psi difference between tests and nothing!747heavy wrote:it may be due to the temperature rise during the test --> leading to an increase in gas pressure --> leading to an offset in the force axis as the loadcell will see an increase in load/force due to the increase in gas force.
Position (It has an encoder of 600 pulses per lap) and a freq controller.747heavy wrote:Just another question (unrelated to this), do you know if your damper dyno samples the data time or position dependent?
If time dependent, to you know what the sample rate is?
Oh, I tended to see it mor like in the temp graph there was a force decrease (both bump and rebound) and then in the "average" graph there was not the decrease but an offset.747heavy wrote:I did, and on the same tokken if you look here, you see a similar offset for a temperature increase of 20°, a graph you provided earlier, and which looks very similar to the damper shown in your last graph.