riff_raff,
looking at the F1 diagrams we have here, i notice that they have rigid cylinders for the air chamber and not diaphragms that are typical on automotive suspension air springs.
What is your take on this?
I believe leakage with the rigid cylinder may be a bigger issue than we thought.
Here's a nice article if anyone is interested in air springs.
http://www.nts-bg.ttm.bg/journal/Archiv ... .mtm10.pdf
Apparently this article is about having an additional volume beside the main spring chamber. The additional chamber permits tune-ability of the spring rate.
what is shown is that the stiffness of the spring is dependent on many things, most notably, frequency dependence. I am not sure how this stiffness and frequncy profile will look at 150Hz (valtrain at 9000rpm, engine at 18000) or for lower engine speeds seeing as though the experiment was with much lower frequencies.
Other dependents are: gas pressure, piston area, gas constant .
The spring stiffness is inversely proportional to the chamber volume. I suppose in a F1 race car valve stem chamber, you can modulate the regulator to either reduce chamber pressure as the volume decreases, depending if you want a constant spring rate. I can imagine the chamber will have rapid changes in speed and volume thus rapid pressure changes.
All in all the physical system seems like it should be very simplified for a valve train. It doesn't have the needs that vehicle suspension would.
From this article.
waepubl.luth.se/1402-1617/2002/059/LTU-EX-02059-SE.pdf
There is an equation for a constant effective area, which sounds like an F1 valve stem chamber.
K = (atm. press + gauge press) * Area of piston ^2 / Chamber volume.