Having casually observed
the "J-damper" conversation for a while now, I noted that somewhere along the line scarbs asserted that McLaren had adopted the device some three years ago and alternatively called the device "Inerter". Thinking that this sounded like a much more plausible term for the kind of a function that had been described (
and myself having loosely pictured as a "legal" alternative after Renault's debacle), I did a cursory web search along these lines.
What it yielded might well be the whole authoritative "low down" on the inerter. The trail led all the way to a University of Cambridge Dept. of Engineering, Control Group, professor Malcolm C. Smith and an IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, Vol. 47, No. 10 (
October 2002) article describing in great detail the problem setting and synthesis of a passive, mechanical one-point network. This seems to me to be the very paper that coins the term inerter, "the true network dual of the spring".
I have only briefly leafed through a number of PDF documents at this point (
just venturing to post the links in my enthusiasm before really taking any time or effort as such), so I won't even attempt some half-a**ed representation of the theory or function. Anyway, obviously prof. Smith's papers make the most complete and concise case for the inerter by themselves. The links below, I believe, can have various F1T members occupied for some time.
Synthesis of Mechanical Networks: The Inerter
(
PDF, IEEE ToAC, M.C.Smith, 2002)
The Inerter Concept and Its Application
(
PDF, SICE Conference plenary lecture, M.C.Smith, 2003)
Performance Benefits in Passive Vehicle Suspensions Employing Inerters
(
PDF, Vehicle System Dynamics, M.C.Smith & F-C.Wang, 2004)
Positive Real Synthesis Using Matrix Inequalities for Mechanical Networks: Application to Vehicle Suspension
(
PDF, IEEE ToAC, C.Papageorgiou & M.C.Smith, 2006)
Prof. Malcolm C. Smith's university website profile, replete with these, and other, links
At this point it seems to me that references in F1 circles to the "J-damper" were, while legitimate in their own right, a bit of a red herring still to throw people off the inerter's trail. The information, after all, is in the public realm and has been so for at least six years now so it certainly isn't a great big secret as such. Doubtless the teams' engineers (
and manufacturers') will be scouring academic records for just such innovations.
The inerter, from the get go, certainly wasn't among the obscurest ideas. Prominently described by a professor from a prominent university, three years' application time into F1 (
by the first team) from having access to complete documentation isn't exactly lightning fast.