thisisatest wrote:could you remove the dampers and keep the springs, push one end down all the way, let go and see what happens?
A rather more sophisticated version of this is mentioned in the literature on modal analysis from the 80s. In theory it is possible to work back from your set of rigid body modes, and your known compliances, to the inertial properties of the thing.
The trouble is you never know your compliances to the sort of accuracy that is needed.
My current approach for CGZ is a sort of halfway house. We measure all our roll stiffnesses and RCH on a K&C rig, I set my model up the same. Then we measure the roll and pitch gradient on the track and I fine tune the CGZ to give the same. Then we measure the frequency response on the track (increasing sine test) and match that on the model, although that involves a lot more than just roll inertia.