ginsu wrote:Wow, ciro, that's development for you. I know the picture you showed was the Sachs Rotary Damper.
Sorry, ginsu, I did not explain myself correctly.
First, thanks for your references. The photo is awesome, thanks again. I haven't thought they could be used as clutches... that's another wow, but this time in "admiration mode".
Corvettes also uses linear MR dampers and they behave quite well. I tested (for a lap) a Z06 at Tocancipá, on a demo. I believe they are used on "normal" Ferraris, or so the Corvette owner said, but they are electronically controlled.
The videos from Gazzetta dello Sport that I posted are proof of Ferrari
using MR dampers, after
developing them. The pdf abstract proofs (maybe) they were
designed by Sachs working with Fiat. The picture I posted is the
actual Ferrari damper. Here is the article, by Sachs, where I took it from:
http://www.schwab-kolb.com/zf-sachs/en/sachs002.htm
I believe Sachs is the official provider of dampers for Ferrari. They are "fixed dampers" as pointed out: you have to change the whole unit for each track.
You can see they were used since May 2003, Spanish GP. Ferraris have been dominant since, if you don't take in account the time Renault used his own (now forbidden) chassis dampers. Coincidence?
Finally, here is a quote from "Saku", apparently an engineer at Renault's blog while Renault was testing at Barcelona, less than a month ago (
http://blog.renaultf1.com/index.php?en/ ... 4-february ), my emphasis:
Renault's blog wrote:"Also, last year Ferrari and McLaren tried to imitate the effects of our Mass Damper with traditional suspension technology. Renault have had to play catch up in this area in a very short amount of time.
Suspension geometry from what I've read is a very tricky art, and Renault are a little bit behind McLaren and Ferrari in this area.
After the 2005 debacle Ferrari spent a lot of time and money creating and researching suspension test beds, McLaren have been doing this for a long time too. I think it is for this reason the mass damper ban hurt us so much."