I seem to remember discusing ride height levelling and pitch compensating hydro pneumatic suspension systems on this forum some time ago.
Can anyone find the thread.
I think it focused on the red bull and pull rod suspension.
Beats me. It doesn't have to be mercury, though. Just an object of a given mass that can travel fore and aft to stiffen the front and rear dampers under braking and acceleration.FoxHound wrote:@Bhall
Mercury it could not be....It's on the list of banned metals no?
I am also wondering this. Mercedes successfully argued their 'not driver operated DDRS' but suggesting the trigger was a secondary feature, not the primary - could this be the same thinking?amouzouris wrote:I am wondering if it has anything to do with the whole braking system. Remember the 'I pressed the brakes and nothing happened' ??
wikiThis system uses a belt or camshaft driven pump from the engine to pressurise a special hydraulic fluid, which then powers the brakes, suspension and power steering. It can also power any number of features such as the clutch, turning headlamps and even power windows. The suspension system usually features driver-variable ride height, to provide extra clearance in rough terrain.
SourceThe hydraulic implementation provides several advantages regarding the installation in any kind of chassis. But the main issue is the ability to set different damping rates for every movement of the car.
Many cars require that pitch damping is different from roll damping. This is related to the different inertias and different spring rates associated with these two movements. Matching damping and spring rates is extremely important to gain grip, which means safety when in difficult or extreme situations.
With our system we can provide not only different settings for pitch and roll, but also for the vertical movement, so the stability can be improved without impairing comfort.
And then, the same car that behaves correctly at high speed in the road will negotiate difficult off-road paths beating any similar car that is equipped with conventional suspension elements.
Key Benefits:
• Increased stability
• More off-road traction and more corner grip
• increased braking capability in any situation.
• Improved steering
• The hydraulic version allows a better matching of different modes damping
That's why thy pay the engineers the "telephone number" salaries these days.mx_tifoso wrote:Couldn't Lotus have adjusted their system to work within the rules? If it is as much of a benefit as it's made out to be, then surely it would have been worth the trouble?FoxHound wrote:The lotus system was banned because it was mechanically operated.
Using the brakes, the system would work.
Mercedes idea is inertia based, and doesn't use electrics or mechanical input from the driver to work.
The reference found by Cam is very interesting, and is very relevant for an off-road vehicle. However, the temperature coefficient of expansion of hydraulic fluid would, on the face of it, make it unacceptable in an F1 application.Cam wrote:interconnected suspension
Source
G-sensitive dampers exist, and have been used in F1 since 1999, to my knowledge. "Interactive" (coupled) damping is not required.bhallg2k wrote:Just an object of a given mass that can travel fore and aft to stiffen the front and rear dampers under braking and acceleration.
Actually, variable motion ratios are used quite widely in F1 (but I know what you mean). Variable dampers are also used (see above), and every aero car I meet (as well as some non-aero cars) use displacement sensitive spring rates. None require the suspension to be "interactive".WhiteBlue wrote:Obviously variable geometries are not an option. But variable damping and spring rates are not prohibited by the rules AFAIK.
This is not quite true. Strictly, rear axle travel with no front axle travel is combined heave & pitch motion about the c.g. that happens to cancel at the front axle.Scarbs wrote:How F1 suspension works
...An F1 car's suspension has to look after the chassis in two main modes: heave and roll. Heave is when the car is moving up and down vertically, when this occurs at just one end of the car, it's known as pitch.
Why would they choose to do that? Springs are very efficient at supporting a vehicle. We used springs to support the vehicle even in a fully active system - saving weight and providing a relatively safe failure mode.FRIC
…..Both of these systems replace the springs and dampers of a normal suspension, so the system solely relies on the hydraulic fluid to hold the weight of the car. The fluid is therefore kept at high pressure within the hydraulic elements and pipework...
I would be surprised if flow control valves provided the spring effect of a conventional suspension....Although outwardly simple the system has far more complexity when the detail is looked at. The system needs to incorporate flow control valves to provide the spring and damper effect of conventional suspension...
How do accumulators account for a change in volume? This surely implies that the accumulators store & replenish fluid in the system with no pressure difference to drive it. Citroen did it, but used a high pressure oil supply to drive the operation....accumulators are needed to account for the change in volume of fluid in the system when the temperature varies…
As I understand it, Warp load controls the fraction of roll moment carried by the front axle, and hence the mechanical balance of the vehicle. Warp, or roll displacement only affects mechanical balance if it has something akin to a roll bar to convert that displacement to a load. It is possible to establish balance with roll out, roll in, or indeed no roll.….But perhaps the biggest complexity is when the team starts to link the roll and pitch circuits together. It's possible that the system could be used simply to control pitch and roll separately, but the car is rarely in just one of these modes…..In this condition you would want the pitch control to be good, preventing dive. But you would like a little roll to induce some mechanical grip….