Less so than conventional aero since nominally half of the downforce would act directly on the wheel, i.e. on the unsprung portion of the suspension.Giblet wrote:I would imagine suspension arms that produce varying levels of downforce would be very hard to dial in a good spring rate with or to fully undertand what is actually going on in the corners of the vehicle.
That lower control arm would snap in half in the first corner. Not being straight defeats the whole benefit of an A-arm.MIKEY_! wrote:I don't suppose this would be legal. Grey lines are suspension arms. Left black square is the nose, right one is the wheel/tire. Only the lower suspension arm would be worth having a gurney.
This gets the 'wing' we've created much closer to the ground for more DF.
hmmm I tend to disagree. Triangle should be the strongest shape but it might depend on the application. Circular shapes are prebuckled and therefore less stiff.godlameroso wrote:Even stronger are circular shapes,
I'll draw you a mechanical picture tomorrow to show, why straight arms are the best in suspension way. Curved arms are from the mechanical way a desaster.MIKEY_! wrote:Why not? Is the chord too small? And why must they be straight. They will act in the same way as a normal arm so long as they don't flex.