DaveW wrote: ↑05 Mar 2018, 16:31So we need to achieve such a combination of the values of tires, springs and shock absorbers so that the acceleration for sprung and unsprung masses during rebound and compression is the least?Rustem 1988 wrote: ↑05 Mar 2018, 13:20Then dyamically, Mu*D*D(Xu) = (Ks+Cs*D)*(Xs-Xu) + (Kt+Ct*D)*(Xu-Xr). Here D*D(Xu) is the acceleration of the wheel, and Mu is the wheel (unsprung) mass. Wst disappears because it is balanced by static offsets of the springs. A similar equation can be written for the acceleration of the sprung mass, and the two can be solved together to compute the various responses of the vehicle per unit road input.
It is a little more than that, because the sprung mass connects the front & rear suspensions (so the sprung mass has "heave" & "pitch" inertias).
Thank you Greg.Greg Locock wrote: ↑20 Mar 2018, 18:59If your objective is maximising grip at all times, on rough surfaces, that might seem to be a reasonable path. But imagine a wheel that did not accelerate vertically. Every variation in height in the road surface would have to be absorbed in the tire. This would be a very bad thing. So I think it is the wrong way of thinking. A skyhook active suspension does almost the opposite, it tries to keep the vertical load on each wheel constant. That maximises the overall grip of the vehicle (you can't really talk about single wheel models).
Yes.Greg Locock wrote: ↑20 Mar 2018, 22:00"I assume we need the wheel to absorb the roughness before it bounces off the road."
What is your objective?
So it is necessary that the rough surface be absorbed with the help of a tire and a spring for maximum efficiency?Greg Locock wrote: ↑20 Mar 2018, 18:59If your objective is maximising grip at all times, on rough surfaces, that might seem to be a reasonable path. But imagine a wheel that did not accelerate vertically. Every variation in height in the road surface would have to be absorbed in the tire.
Fast absorption of road roughness with minimal variation of the load on the wheel.
...But I wouldn't mind if the load increased, maximizing minimum load would be the key for me.Rustem 1988 wrote: ↑20 Mar 2018, 23:59Fast absorption of road roughness with minimal variation of the load on the wheel.
I imagine that you have used a vehicle model, and the graphs were generated from model results. It would be very helpful if you could list the model, the parameter values used and the annotated graphs you generated....Rustem 1988 wrote: ↑23 Mar 2018, 22:52I made some graphs for the vibration velocity with damping and I got at a lower natural frequency the deviation of the velocity from zero less than for the for a large natural frequency. It turns out that for smaller mass velocity is changed in a larger range, if we have free oscillations?