Tim.Wright wrote:speedsense wrote:Racer_D wrote:Hann
This was an example either left or right rear on two cars with same suspension settings to show they yield more or less the same results.
Here a peak is visibile at about 4 Hz it seems.
http://i42.tinypic.com/116kinq.jpg
If the question is purely which setting has better damping, the answer is rather simple in the graph, that is, if the rest of components remained unchanged and the shock was the only setting changed and the car is being driven close to the same speeds.
The line that has less time spent in higher magnitudes has the better dampening control. The time spent at the "higher" velocities is reduced, thus there is more dampening occurring. And to define further, the shock beyond 2Hz and above is typically termed the High speed control and mostly dampening bumps, curbs etc.
You could apply a Derivative to the suspension signal in a signal plot to go along with this graph to see the bumpy areas of the track, would make it easier to define the shock control... and whether adding more dampening is making the car better or worse. Better dampening does not always mean "better" in terms of laptime..
I wouldn't agree with that. What we see is the the red shock has
more high speed damping, but without knowing the track or any other info who's to say that its better?
You have equated less movement to better damping. My opinion is that less movement means more variations in contact patch force because the suspension is not doing its job. So if I
had to choose one of the two curves, I'd go for the blue one because its allowing the wheel to move over bumps but its still not showing any uncontrolled resonant peaks.
Respectfully disagree with your comment...the graph is not a measure of movement, but a measure of HZ cycling of the spring, as the graph is in HZ, and the graph measurement of that in Frequency... lower hz numbers MEANS the dampening is lowering the Magnitude of the HZ...And I did not say one or the other is "better", just that one has more dampening, with "better" meaning more dampening, not that the setting itself is better,,... which I believe the "question" was about
From this graph, we cannot determine movement, not without a signal plot showing wheel movement differences..
Changes in dampening will not change the movement amount unless there was a "limiter or droop limiter" in the shock involved, it will change however the frequency that the springs cycle has, thus in turn lowering the hz operating number and the stated Magnitude..
To explain this further, an under damped spring will overshoot and cycle more times, thus increasing the frequency and the Magnitude of the frequency, over dampening creates the exact opposite effect, Less cycling, Less frequency in HZ.. IMHO
"Driving a car as fast as possible (in a race) is all about maintaining the highest possible acceleration level in the appropriate direction." Peter Wright,Techical Director, Team Lotus