hardingfv32 wrote:Given two springs of equal rate, one small and one large in size, what design features come into play when choosing one or the other. I appreciate the benefits of less weight and a smaller package. Just wondering if the spring can get too small for either a coil spring or torsion bar.Brian
hardingfv32 wrote:"Some coil spring manufacturers build their springs lighter with
short lengths or few coil winds. This creates a very abrupt frequency that
does not let the tire follow the surface of the race track. Coil springs are
essentially a torsion bar wound into a cylinder shape. Coil springs with a
small number of coils are the same as a short torsion bar. Racers learned
years ago that cars with short torsion bars will hop across the bumps."
hardingfv32,
That last quote is a bit inaccurate. A helical coil spring is not "essentially a torsion bar wound into a cylinder". While it's true that both torsion bars and helical coil spring wires are both primarily stressed in torsion, there is a big difference in the mechanics of how the load is applied and reacted. The torsion bar requires the load to be applied as a moment, while the coil spring requires the load to be applied as a linear force. The spring rate of both simple torsion and coil springs is mostly linear within their elastic limits, and their inherent structural vibration modes (frequencies) do not change or "become abrupt".
The decision as to whether a torsion bar or coil spring is best for a particular suspension application basically boils down to packaging. The torsion spring requires a suspension linkage that will twist it, and the coil spring requires a linkage that will compress it.
Torsion springs are much easier to manufacture, since they require less specialized manufacturing equipment. But helical coil springs tend to have a more consistent spring rate, due to the fact that the torsional strain in the wire for a given load takes place over a much longer effective length.
Whether you use torsion or coil springs, having a suspension linkage that maximizes movement in the spring and dampener will always make adjusting/setting up the suspension easier. Suspensions with limited motion and/or high spring and dampener rates, results in greater sensitivity to small changes. If a wheel is "hopping across bumps", then that sounds like a rebound dampening problem and not specifically a spring problem. The accuracy of the dampener can be improved by increasing the fluid volume flow across the valving. If the dampener stroke travel is limited, you would need to increase the cylinder diameter.
Good luck.