You are correct. Lotus started developping the concept in 1982. But anyway it didn't have any saying in the way ground effect cars where set up.Pingguest wrote:I thought the 1982 Lotus was the first car with active suspension. It was an answer to the FIA banning their 'double chassis'.
It was indeed and I remember a quote from Mario Andretti before the roll-out; "The 80 will make the 79 look like a London-bus."MadMatt wrote: ...
But the 80 was supposed to be the ultimate "no-wing" F1 car !
Yep,,,What I heard was that the Center of Pressure moved around...Don't know, but that was what I heard.it was terribly pitch-sensitive, making downforce balance front and rear come and go in an unpredictable fashion.
The 60mm-rule was scrapped for 1982 as FISA was not able to measure it on-track. The hydropneumatic system needed a lot of testing to get it to work properly. Halfway through the season FISA allowed other systems which could lower the cars by flicking a switch. Gordon Murray was frustrated after he spnt so much effort in developing a legal system.xpensive wrote:As I can recall, the FIA had regulated a minimum 60 mm ground-clearance, measured in the pits obviously, why Nelson had a hydraulic device lowering his BT49 to a rock-hard suspension on track. I remember him once telling the scrutineers that the actuating lever was a hand-brake or something, must have been a beast to drive anyway.