Giblet wrote:Fair enough, care to elaborate?
Let's try.
The Lotus system installed on the 99T (the first active car to win a race) had parallel springs & bump rubbers that were capable of supporting the vehicle, & the hydraulic actuators that normally over-powered these to control the vehicle acted as crude dampers when the system was depressurized. The system was designed specifically so that the suspension would function after a power failure. As I stated earlier, Senna finished a race in that state, completing 6 laps (& losing around 10 seconds per lap, I recall). Hardly a "sled".
I don't think that MR fluid dampers could be considered to be an "active suspension". They have independent hydraulics, true, but I'm not aware that they have ever been used to control right height. They do have a single point of failure, the controller. Also, if current is not pumped continuously to each corner, the actuators revert to a nominally undamped state. The dampers are serious heavy - hardly an F1 contender, I think. A lighter solution is available (in theory), using ER fluid, but that requires seriously high voltages (circa 700 V DC). Overall, then, I would question the idea of "rheological" fluids as "active", they have implementation problems, they don't intrinsically improve reliability, & the failure mode is not ideal....
I have yet to encounter a decoupled damper solution on the rear of an F1 vehicle. In fact, there are good arguments against the idea.
I think the major cornering speed change happened with skirted venturis. Skirts had been banned by the time first AS car ran (1983). I cannot think that drivers thought they where playing a video game....