Powerslide wrote:Correct me if my chronology of events is inaccurate but the J-Damper came about around when teams wanted to make their own version of mass damper.
I'm unsure about the chronology, but Scarbs has
views. Tuned mass dampers and inerters are very different devices, and on an F1 car work in different ways. The first is designed to dissipate disturbance energy directly, whilst the second is intended to make the existing dampers work more effectively. The first works best if the conventional suspension is "locked" out, the second requires the conventional suspension to move.
Powerslide wrote:...It (the inerter) is a kinetic motor that pulls two suspension together when triggered by certain frequency in this case, an initial impact of a curb....
I'm not sure I would describe an inerter as a "motor". The picture you paint is for a "centre" installation, but they still seem to work (perhaps surprisingly) when fitted to "corner" units, with no "3rd's" in sight. Unlike the mass damper, an inerter is not, by itself, frequency sensitive. So what do they do:
1. They work tyres harder (I believe that F1 teams use them mainly to heat the front tyres).
2. They "linearise" dampers and bump rubbers (thus making the dampers more effective).
3. Drivers (almost universally) like them.
The first two are readily apparent from rig tests, but the third is more interesting. I have, I think, helped at least two teams to win their championships, and while I can handle the mathematics and "optimize" suspensions, I cannot pretend to understand them because I don't know why drivers are so positive about them. Hence my question.
Interestingly, perhaps, inertered suspensions display some of the characteristics of a "sky-hook" damping strategy, at least at low frequencies.
Edit: Found Scarbs article, referenced above.