Thanks, yzfr7. Good explanation (well, good because I agree with it
).
Anyway, a shock absorber, I reiterate, works the way Dave describes.
I guess you all know this: the deflection valves (the picture I am posting is terrible, it has only one on the bottom chamber, I do not know why) are like round washers, but they are in the shape of a truncated cone (if you see them from the edge, they are not a line, the outer part of the circle is upwards of the center part). When the pressure in the liquid increases, the washer "clicks" and reverses its form, allowing the liquid to pass. The more pressure, the more clicks you'll get and more fluid will pass, absorbing with less resistance big movements while keeping the car "stiff" on small vertical movements of the tyre, when the valves are closed.
The racing shock absorbers I have worked with have a lot more valves than the ones in the picture (at least in the rebound side). What you regulate when you tune the car is the size of the holes and the size of the washers of this valves.
There are a couple of improvements to the basic shock absorber I know. The first are the
gas charged ones. There you have a gas on a "third" chamber that has compressed nitrogen. This has two purposes: first, the increased pressure of the gas makes harder for the air and the liquid to mix. A mixture of gas an liquid is compressible, while a liquid is not. With less aireation the shock absorber is more consistent: normal shock absorbers get "mushy" after a while (not all the problems you get at the end of the race come from tyre degrading...
).
Actually, I do not know many people that can "feel" the difference: I have to convince some friends to test this "by hand", dismounting the part after a ride and asking them to compare the resistance with that of an "unshaked" part. Once you try to "feel the difference in the chassis" between the shock absorbers at the start and the end of the race, you find it. Actually, this also happens to gas absorbers, even if it is reduced compared to normal absorbers, not only because the gas, no matter the pressure, try to mix with the liquid, but because the liquid gets hotter and thus, more fluid.
Secondly, the gas pressure precharges the shock absorber, making it stiffer. This pressure will not help to increase the height of a car. The reason gas shock absorbers extend by themselves is a little more tricky: the area of the piston on the upper part of the valve is reduced (because of the shock absorber rod) and thus a differential pressure will develop.
Shock absorbers with a
dual resistance have been devised. In this case, you have two shock absorbers, one inside the other (crudely speaking). The first one is "soft" and takes small irregularities of the road. The second one takes big bumps (is stiffer) and makes the car less prone to pitch an rolling. They also have tapered grooves on the pressure tube that allow the fluid to bypass the main valve while the shock absorber is in a middle zone and forces all the liquid to pass through the main valve when it is extended or compressed too much.
There are
acceleration sensitive shock absorbers, that makes the suspension sensitive to G-forces, like Dave suggests: they have special valves that are sensitive, not only to the velocity of the fluid, like the dual resistance ones, but sensitive to G-forces. I know the Monroe Reflex. In this model, there is a "twin valve": the normal valve and a bypass around it, concentrical in what appears to be just one valve.
Finally, there is a speciall kind of acceleration sensitive shock absorbers, really ingenious (well, at least I didn't "get it" when I saw them for the first time...
). They are also called
mono-chamber absorbers (at least in spanish). They only have a chamber. The chamber has a free-floating dividing piston, that separates compressed nitrogen gas in the lower section, from the liquid in the upper section, over the dividing piston. The pressure of the gas in this case helps to sustain the vehicle. The dividing piston moves freely keeping the liquid chamber full at all times, as the pressure piston (the normal piston of a regular shock absorber) moves up and down.
What makes me think about the possibility of a second free floating piston (not inside the chamber, but outside it) is this last design.
Perhaps somebody knows what kind of shock absorbers are used in F1 cars.