strad wrote: ↑16 Feb 2020, 03:16
Bump-steer means
any time the wheel encounters a bump the steering geometry changes. Toe in or toe out, camber.??. Most all cars have some bump-steer some times and is usually undesirable.
When you lower a cars ride height you usually create bump-steer and have to adjust the steering rack and tie rod height.
This thing of purposely inducing bump-steer has me quite confused.
I'm not a front suspension expert but when I lowered my Mustang Cobra I had to learn and fix the problem.
It's un-nerving to have your steering change on it's own mid corner.
All cars will undergo suspension geometry changes as the suspension is loaded and unloaded. It all depends on the initial geometry, the forces, the compliance of the suspension and other mysterious factors that create imaginary lines, such as COG and roll centers.
If you change the arm slant but not the suspension pick up points you change a lot of variables. Geometry, KPI, roll center, forces on the control arms which affects bushing compliance and more.
The suspension on F1 cars is hard to change in layout. On the one hand raising the suspension pick up points as high as possible is good for aero, but potentially bad for kinematics if you can't create the proper geometry. Furthermore aero is king so suspension has to be designed around not just being out of the way, but also to control the aero platform of the car.
As you can imagine these are contradictory goals. I feel the extreme angles and geometry we see in F1 goes unappreciated.