A good summary. A couple of additions:Sombrero wrote:The Lotus active suspension story
http://www.gglotus.org/ggtech/activesus ... vesusp.htm
I read somewhere (Peter Wright) that the active suspension was already a "plan B" to fix the issues with the full length ground effect chassis Lotus 80. It was rejected : too soon. "Plan A" was the twin-bodied Lotus 86 "Torrey Canyon" that lead to the Lotus 88.
Both "Plan A" & "Plan B" had been proposed when issues with the '80 appeared terminal - it was the first time that the ground effect instability known as "porpoising" had been recognized (in spades). "Plan B" had not been thought about in detail until the '88 had finally been banned, & we then started from scratch.
The system installed in the '92 was powered hydraulically by a pump attached to the DFV cam shaft, and electrically by a separate (uncharged) battery (the existing vehicle system was too noisy). The control system was an analogue computer with multiplying DAC's acting as potentiometers, controlled by a low power digital computer (the ubiquitous DSP came later).
The system was removed after the second race simply because Lotus had switched to Renault turbo power, & Renault refused to allow the hydraulic pump to be driven from the engine.