Lotus started researching active suspension in 1981, intending for it to be used to maximise ground effect. Unfortunately, the flat bottom rule was introduced in 1983 before the system was ready to race (so there could never be a tunnels/skirts/active triple hit combo).autogyro wrote:The hydramatic system showed lots of promise and it was considered by Lotus for F1 use. Of course the Lotus development ended with fully active suspension for ground effects with tunnels and skirts and then twin chassis'. Followed shortly after by a ban and the death of chunky. A sad loss. IMO F1 has come little distance since.
During the 1983 season, Nigel Mansell ran the active system in 2 races before it was dropped for performance reasons. Lotus then returned to traditional suspension setups until 1987, when Ayrton Senna won 3 races in the active 99T.