Jolle wrote: ...... When the bike is on an extreme lean angle, the normal suspension doesn't work anymore and all suspension must come out of the flexing of the frame.
is there any authoritive opinion (a paper ?) on this matter ?
over the last 40+ years (including posting on this site) I have often said as much (as the above)
but .....
the machine lean angle is still only around 55 deg, the riders using more body displacement than ever before to this end
given modern low-friction bushes and lubricants, basic calculations suggest that the suspension does work
if we wish to engineer some structural behaviour that does some of the suspension's job
a carbon fibre structure has more scope for this than does a metal structure
metal is isotropic in its stiffness properties, carbon fibre (according its placement) allows suitably non-isotropic stiffness properties
that is tailored elasticity
it was used in the X-29 plane such that an upload on the wing produced upward deflection without twist
this would be impossible using a metal wing (part of the reason for the current composite structures ?)