I am wondering if that is considered an active suspension?
Tenneco kinetic suspension
if it is not
why its use is not extended in racing cars?
That is main problem! How make system more consistent?DaveW wrote:So far as I'm aware (i.e. the last time I looked) any hydraulic coupling is permitted, including connection to a pressurised supply, perhaps with one or two debateable exceptions. What is not allowed is any form of electrical connection.
The issue with hydraulic solutions is compliance (both fluid & pipes), related time delays, and fluid volumetric thermal expansion coefficient.
With this, the use of porwered valves is forbidden.FIA wrote:10.2.2 Any powered device which is capable of altering the onfiguration or affecting the performance of any part of the suspension system is forbidden.
10.2.3 No adjustment may be made to the suspension system while the car is in motion.
You are not wrong, which is what makes the topic fascinating.matt21 wrote:I think the hardest thing to make this thing work is to get around these rules:
I have a very high regard for the Citroen hydro-pneumatic system. What they achieved, at relatively low cost, was remarkable. Certainly, in the context of that application hydraulic fluid can be considered incompressible - but that is not always the case. Fluid compressibility has a measurable effect on the performance of race car dampers &, I recall, it also affected the performance of the "hydraulic rocker" that was the basis of the Tyrrell system.Dragonfly wrote:Due to the very low compression ratio of the hydraulic fluid, the links can be considered as solid rod links with the benefit of the absence of complicated mechanical parts and tuning the system by varying gas pressure and fluid pass holes/valves diameter in the accumulator spheres where the gas acts as the spring.
Note: Just an opinion of a layman who happens to drive a Citroen.